


As in all technical drawing applications, it is wise to set up your environment correctly, beforehand, it will save a lot of time.Start FreeCAD, create a new drawing, and switch to the Draft Workbench.It is presumed that the previous table exercise has been preformed and there will be less explanation of skills already covered. To showcase the working and possibilities of the Draft Workbench, we will walk through a simple exercise, the result of which will be this little drawing, showing the floor plan of a small house that contains only a kitchen counter top (A pretty absurd floor plan, but we can do what we want here, can't we?): This work bench contains a working plane/grid system that allows you to define precisely in which plane you are working, and a complete snapping system that makes it very easy to draw and position elements precisely in relation to each other. All its tools work in the whole 3D space and many of the Draft tools, for example Move or Rotate, are commonly used elsewhere in FreeCAD because they are often more intuitive than changing placement parameters manually.Īmong the tools offered by the Draft Workbench, you will find traditional drawing tools like The Draft Workbench, although it adopts ways of working inherited from the traditional 2D CAD world, is not limited to the 2D realm.

In any case, FreeCAD features a more traditional workbench, with tools found in most 2D CAD applications: The Draft Workbench. You might be interested in FreeCAD because you already have some technical drawing experience, for example with software like AutoCAD, or you already know something about design, or you prefer to draw things before building them.
