Printing Plates - Freeship

Discussion in 'Boat Design' started by Grant Stretch, Apr 15, 2026.

  1. Grant Stretch
    Joined: Apr 2026
    Posts: 1
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    Location: UK

    Grant Stretch New Member

    Hi All

    As a complete newbie to boat design and this forum please be kind and forgive me if this is a topic that has already been covered.

    I have completed a very simple design in Freeship that includes Braces/Bulkheads at regular intervals and what I would like to do is print the plates for the braces so that I can use the print outs as templates to mark out the timber ready for cutting.

    The challenge is that the plates show the braces as full width of the boat and to share the plates with a printing firm I need to 'print to pdf'. This is fine except the largest paper size I can select is Architect E and this is smaller than the dimensions of the largest brace.

    So my question is does Freeship scale the plate down to fit onto Architect E and if so what scale does it use.

    The other option would be to print one side of the brace/bulkhead however I cannot see how to create a plate for half a bulkhead.

    Can anyone help with scales and/or how to create a plate for half a brace/bulkhead please.

    Thanks for any advise or help you can offer.

    Grant
     
  2. TANSL
    Joined: Sep 2011
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    Location: Spain

    TANSL Senior Member

    I'm not very familiar with how modern CNC cutting machines work, but you could ask if they can cut to a different scale than the drawing. It doesn't seem like it would be difficult to achieve.
     
  3. Tops
    Joined: Aug 2021
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    Location: Minnesota

    Tops Senior Member

    Hi @Grant Stretch , is it possible to output the Freeship plates as DXF and use another software to split the plates in half, confirm/scale to 1:1 as would be on paper, and then print 1:1 to PDF? It is not the most elegant solution but would remove a layer of randomness.

    @TANSL the typical workflow is the part design is prepared in 2D or 3D CAD and then ran into a CAM program to write the code for a specific CNC machine.
    The CAM programs allow a user to confirm or change scale of the CAD data, and to write the code to whatever inch or millimeter values the CNC machine prefers. It saves time if the data is 1:1 in either inches or millimeters.

    The 'slicing' software for 3D printing is a basic CAM program, where most of the machine based setting are managed through menus so the end user can focus more on the object and less on the programming.
     
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  4. myszek
    Joined: Jan 2013
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    Location: Lodz, Poland

    myszek Senior Member

    Export to .dxf is possible, as well as export to .txt file.
    I usually export plates to .txt, then manually convert to .ps (with the use of Excel, it is simple). Then import the file to Corel Draw, which is a very convenient (for me) 2D graphical software. For example, I can easily split the plates into the ply sheets, add puzzle joints, holes etc.
    Those who work with CAD would probably prefer export to .dxf

    regards

    krzys
     
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  5. wet feet
    Joined: Nov 2004
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    Location: East Anglia,England

    wet feet Senior Member

    I have played a little with Freeship and recall that there is an option to view either half the design or both sides.It may be that selecting one half would allow the shapes to fit onto a smaller piece of paper/drafting film.I am unfamiliar with Architect E as a paper size and would suggest that you seek a local copy/print/drafting materials supplier to see what the largest material they can plot a shape on might be.I would expect A0 would be achievable in most large towns and you might find a business that has a roll plotter,which effectively gives unlimited size in one direction.If your objects are wider than the roll,you need to add dashed grid lines to allow two or more sections of the roll to be aligned and taped together.

    Alternatively you could seek out a business with a CNC router and simply present them with a memory stick that has the .dxf files of the shapes on it.They are likely to have software that would nest the shapes efficiently and could probably cut all the parts much more rapidly than you could,and to a very high level of accuracy.I would be quite surprised if it cost very much more than having a very large printing job done and it might well cost less.
     
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  6. Tops
    Joined: Aug 2021
    Posts: 472
    Likes: 139, Points: 43
    Location: Minnesota

    Tops Senior Member

    Good suggestions from @myszek and @wet feet
    Large format template creation via CAD/CAM/CNC is part of my day job.
    @Grant Stretch is it possible to share a sample plate file from Freeship?
     
  7. kerosene
    Joined: Jul 2006
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    Location: finland

    kerosene Senior Member

    I would think that dxf would work. My suggestion is to include a reference rectangle of known dimensions - say a 1ft X 1ft square. Communicate that to the shop and they can confirm the scale.
     

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