Aerotas drafting is designed to be layered, readable, and practical to import into customer CAD environments. Features are grouped so teams can isolate the data they need, control display clearly, and integrate the deliverable into their own standards with less cleanup.
What this page should help you understand
The published layer list is the place to confirm how linework is separated, what categories of drafted information are included, and what the general structure of the CAD handoff looks like. In practice, customers care less about the exact naming convention than about whether the deliverable is predictable and easy to work with.
Why the template matters
Consistent layers reduce downstream friction. They make it easier to merge Aerotas output into broader drawing sets, turn categories on and off for review, and maintain a cleaner internal standard across multiple projects.
Current status: the legacy site referenced a downloadable layer sheet and CAD template. This resource article now explains the purpose and expected use, while the actual downloadable template remains tracked in the repo backlog for republishing.
What to do if you need the exact layer structure now
If your team needs the precise layer schema for a live job, request it during quoting or project setup so the final delivery can be aligned with your standards. That is especially important when the project has strong internal CAD conventions or client-driven drafting requirements.