These drawings are the Intellectual Property of Michael Esser. Any discovered unauthorized reproduction or use of these drawings could result in criminal charges and will result in civil charges.
If you are unfamiliar with AutoCAD, you may wonder why different lines are particular colors. In AutoCAD, the color of a line determines its line 'weight,' or thickness. Different line weights are used to make the printed drawing more readable (however they may make the screen appear). These particular colors were chosen because they read well when printed on an Hewlett-Packard 650C large-format plotter. The white lines are the thickest (plotted width = 0.015), followed by the magenta (0.012), the blue (0.009), and finally red (0.006).
If you didn't bother to read that 'readme' that came with the WHIP! plug-in (like me), you may not know what to do with it. Try right-clicking ('context-clicking') anywhere on the drawing. (If you can't figure it out from there, it's a lost cause.)
If the plug-in 'freezes up,' (like it did on me when I was screwing around trying to figure it out), try 'Full View' and then 'Back.' It seems to solve the problem.