Now, we come to the real reason you're using On-Screen Takeoff, measuring (taking off) your Plans.
Learning Goal
At the end of this chapter, you should be comfortable with selecting a Scale from the drop-down, instructing OST to calculate a Page's scale based on some known-length linear object on the Plan, how to verify that the set scale is correct, and then how to use the various takeoff tools to measure all the objects on your Plan (linears, areas, counts, and attachments). This chapter covers how to use the takeoff tools including Multi-Condition Takeoff (patented!), supercharge your takeoff and gain efficiency and accuracy by using some of our Advanced Takeoff Tools, covered in the Typical Takeoff chapter.<We want you to get the most out of using On-Screen Takeoff. At this point, we assume you have:
- Created your Bid
- Loaded at least one Plan Set
- Reviewed your Plans and Created Conditions required to measure building objects
In the next few articles, we cover:
- Setting and Verifying Page Scale - this tells the program that for every 'x' of takeoff you draw, it calculates to 'y' results (for example, one of the most common Scales is 3/8"=1', that means for every 3/8" you draw on the Page, it calculates to 1'.
- Using Takeoff Boost™ to jump-start your takeoff.
- Use the linear, area, count, and attachment takeoff tools to account for every building object on your Plan you need to measure.
- Use Multi-Condition Takeoff (patented) to draw several Conditions' takeoff, all at once - huge time saver (fewer clicks makes everyone happy!).
- Accounting for "Negative" takeoff (used in Alternates and Changer Orders quite often).
- Manually entering a takeoff quantity for a Condition versus drawing takeoff on the Plan.
Let's get started with Scale.
![]() | What is Scale and Why is it so Important?![]() |
Related Articles