Scaling a drawing isn't done very much, but it is done.
For instance, it's the middle of the night, the fabricator or machinist can't contact you, the part is due in the morning, and you left off a dimension. No way is he not going to deliver _something_.
As a matter of course, every drawing should say DO NOT SCALE somewhere, typically in the small print in the title block, or on a border, just to give you a tiny bit of ammunition in the occasional finger pointing battle.
There's another reason. Even a good diazo contact print can be off by a couple of percent from the original, just because of curvature and thickness on the exposure drum and shrinkage from the developer. Never mind that photocopiers aren't always in perfect calbration, even at 1:1, or what transmission as a .pdf file can do.
In your case, since you won't always be delivering your product on standard size sheets, it might be a good idea, call it a courtesy, to include a scale bar similar to what you find in the legend of a map, say along a border, so a desperate fabricator can cut out the little bar and use it directly on your print, no matter what size the print arrives at.
<tangent>
One time I was sitting next to a very experienced drafter in an AutoCAD14 shop. I was tasked with converting a couple hundred of his 2D drawings into 3D models.
No problem, I thought; just copy/paste a view or two onto the correct plane at the correct place, extrude, and do a few Boolean operations.
It was a friggin' disaster; I had to do every damn model from scratch.
I asked the old timer why his dimensions didn't exactly match the corresponding lines. He said he gave up on associative dimensioning years before, because it didn't work for him. All of his dimensions were 'overridden' and manually edited.
His lines either failed to meet, or crossed each other at intersections. Always by .003" or so.
The guy had run AutoCAD for years with 'near' as a running osnap.
So DO NOT SCALE applied to his work even when using AutoCAD's internal measuring tools. He even drew rectangles whose nonadjacent edges were not parallel....
</tangent>
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA