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Hi Chris,You will need to find that font online. See if this site has the one you are looking for: http://www.bertholdtypes.com/font/akzidenz-grotesk/standard/AutoCAD only supports True Type fonts.How to install True Type fonts: https://knowledge.autodesk.com/support/autocad/troubleshooting/caas/sfdcarticles/sfdcarticles/Some-TrueType-fonts-not-listed.html
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Hi Wes,Yes, it is possible to convert Advance Steel drawings to regular AutoCAD drawings. Instructions here: http://help.autodesk.com/view/ADSTPR/2015/ENU/?guid=GUID-5317EE15-42DA-43A6-9585-160761CCAC36
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You can add new sizes to the angle profile (EXT_AISC14_Angle_equal under AstorProfiles): http://help.autodesk.com/view/ADSTPR/2017/ENU/?guid=GUID-F107DD46-AE70-4432-A92B-ADFAEA8AA037Keep in mind that the geometry parameters are in milimeters. Once you add the new size to the table, be sure to click on Update Defaults next to the Management Tools icon so that it can take into effect.
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Hi Lawrence, thank you for your post.As a workaround, you can save your special part in a separate drawing, EXPLODE it so everything is showing as 3D solids, and then XREF it into the model. Make sure the selection options for your drawing style has "Detail box with XRefs" selected under the Model objects selection tab. When you are ready to create the drawing, select the xref first, and then use your drawing style. This step is very important since you need to select which xrefs you want to participate. Other info: you can control the fade of the xref under the Display tab in the AutoCAD Options.