glennw

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Everything posted by glennw

  1. Joe, How many times do we need to tell you. PTFP!
  2. It is rebuilding as soon as you delete it. You can go to Defaults....Wall...General Wall...and uncheck Connect Island Rooms. But this is not recommended as it may cause other problems. You would be better off making your fireplace walls "No Room Definition". Delete the room divider wall and it won't rebuild because your fireplace isn't a room anymore.
  3. Chief auto builds the foundation (Level 0) if Automatically Build Foundation is toggled on in the Build Foundation dbx. Chief automatically defines a Garage room as having the floor provided by the floor below (it is a characteristic of the Room Type, of which there are several - look up room types in the help) - but you can manually change this later. In this case, yes, the ceiling height is set on Level 1 and because the floor is being provided from the floor below (Level 0), it's floor height is set on Level 0. If a room isn't defined as having it's floor provided by the floor below, the floor is created on the same level as the room and then you can create a normal foundation (either a mono slab or walls+footings) - you can set Chief to build these automatically. http://screencast.com/t/AMQFUWpHZbk
  4. Keith, This is not correct. The conversion between degrees, minutes and seconds and decimal degrees is a bit more complicated. The conversion is D(dec) = D+M/60+S/3600 You can't just use the same digits and ignore the formatting.. Chief can handle the conversion easily by using Number Style in a dbx. eg, 42° 23' 44" converts to 42.395556° using this feature (not 42.2344º).
  5. Preferences...Architectural... Circle Unconnected Wall Ends. But you are better off leaving this checked and fixing the problem with Build...Wall...Fix Wall Connections which fixes all wall connections in the plan, or you can use the Connect Walls tool on the Edit toolbar for individual walls.
  6. Keith, The Elevation Regions were probably created automatically from closed polylines (contours). That's all an Elevation Region is - a closed Elevation Line. If you draw an closed Elevation Line (polyline) and open it's dbx, it is actually the Elevation Region dbx that opens - not the Elevation Line dbx.
  7. Joe, I think that you missed what I was doing. I was not using reference sets to display the post on other floors in plan. I was using the reference set temporarily to locate the post so that I can draw a cad box on the other floors. And what you say is exactly why I do not use reference sets to indicate the posts on other floors. I do not like using individual posts on different floors because they are too hard to keep synchronised if they need to be moved. And I don't care about the material list. Each to his own.
  8. I am not sure on a mac, but on a PC you can go View...Zoom...and set it to a smaller zoom value. This assumes that the post is not one piece spanning the 2 floors. I was also demonstrating the fact that you can place an object on one floor in plan and have it display on another floor in 3D. I don't use reference sets to do tis sort of thing because I couldn't be bothered changing reference sets or redefining reference sets to display these types of objects. I place the cad box once and it is there permanently.
  9. This is what I do in this situation. I forgot to move the post, but you can see that if you move it in plan, it will move on all floors that it spans. I think this is a better way than having separate posts on each floor - it is a lot easier to control the objects over multiple floors - especially if they need to be moved. http://screencast.com/t/EbtGY6RFV
  10. Johnny, Perhaps...could be another setting?.... http://screencast.com/t/6qUQmOcZg8
  11. Keith, You have several Elevation Regions that are causing most of the problems. There is one main culprit in the top left corner of the site and several down in the lower left. The easiest way to delete them all is to select one, click the Match Properties tool, check Object Type (make sure it is an Elevation Region), OK. This will select all (well, most of them) the Elevation Regions in the plan, hit Delete. Rebuild the terrain. There are other weird things going on with the plan as well - but the above is the main cause of your problems. Here is a video: http://screencast.com/t/IiVcGgbeI
  12. Maybe try and avoid a single layer wall.... ....more specifically, it is probably your Build Platform To Exterior Of Layer setting in the wall definition. You either have a single layer wall or you have that setting to your outside layer.
  13. Kirk, Am I mistaken or does using a symbol multiple times in a plan not add much to the overhead? I am thinking that there is only one instance of a symbol and Chief somehow uses that one instance multiple times? Or...maybe I am way off track?
  14. In the default Build Roof dbx, uncheck Same Roof Height At Exterior Walls (on the Roof Panel).
  15. Perry, Mostly you need to zoom in close to see the roughness of the shadow edges.
  16. In this case Joe's method worked. It only worked because you were still more than 2" away from the end of the wall. I bet that if you move the shower screen closer than 2" from the end of the wall, the wall will snap back and won't leave a nib. Chief doesn't want to leave a wall nib any larger than the width of the wall.
  17. Rob, Mine are probably less complicated than yours and usually I can visualise the load path.
  18. OK Jon, I am surprised you missed it and haven't been using it. It is the only help I ever use. I never use the .pdf help file.
  19. I think I do what Joey does. I draw the posts on one floor level (usually the lowest floor) and in 3D, I make their height span over as many floors as they need to. I then represent them on the other floors as a cad item as required.
  20. Jon, Am I missing something here? - Or are you missing something. Sure, Help...View Reference Manual gives you the .pdf manual. But using Launch Help (F1) (from toolbar or menu) gives you the interactive, contextual help file that has a really good search function, especially if you use the Advanced Search tools. The shortcut for this help is not the right mouse button, it's F1 - but I would be surprised if you don't already know all this and that is why I am surprised by your post.
  21. Interestingly, I believe the only countries in the world that haven't adopted the metric system are Myanmar, Liberia and....oh yes...the USA. Rich, In the US, I think Imperial is the incorrect term - they should probably be referred to as the Customary System - but who really cares!
  22. Australia changed to decimal currency back in 1966 and 1971 for measurements. What...Oz can do it, but the US can't! Just to keep things consistent, maybe you should go the other way and go completely imperial and use Imperial pounds, shillings and pence for your currency!
  23. Chief makes working in both formats easy - especially for dimensions. You can choose to show both metric and imperial units by using the Secondary Format. Or you can change the default Format between Metric and Imperial. This means that you can draw a plan in imperial and then change the default format to metric and all the dimensions will change to metric - how easy is that!
  24. In Oz, we don't even use centimeters, just meters and millimeters, but mostly just millimeters. The only difference really is where the decimal point goes.