Hi Tigertiger,
Oops, try this one, and scale it 120%.
This works for me on my 6500i Canon printer.
attached the wrong file - was half asleep at the time - hard day at the office. Well that's my excuse anyway.
And everyone, if working from imperial, stick to imperial scales, and the same for metric. That way 'Murphy' has less chance of creeping in, and believe me, 'Murphy' takes every opportunity he can.
I have recently been doing drawings for a 1864 paddle boat, the iron hull of which still exists, and have measured it up in imperial measure (feet and inches), as this was the units it was built in. I started out measuring in metric, and the frame modules, and rivet spacing, member sizes, just didn't present themselves. Changing to imperial, all the sizes and modules just leaped out at me, and made everything clear. Lesson learnt, that when drawing up from original drawings or measuring from existing hulls etc, stick with whatever measurement system the original was built in. And I do this for a living and should have known better.
Hope this helps a bit
cheers
kiwi