parkwest

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Posts posted by parkwest

  1. It is important to have all the components if you want to get an accurate material takeoff...

     

    What I want to do is to set up my room defaults so that when I set a room as “basement” my floor structure will be the actual materials without a bunch of extra steps.

  2. Is there an easy way to set up a basement slab to automatically show a 4 inch slab sitting on top of the stem wall footer with a vapor barrier, 2 inches of rigid foam on top of 6 inches of granular fill underneath the slab?  

     

    When I add the other components to the underside of the slab, it raises the slab off the footer the thickness of the additional materials.  Is there a way to lock the footer or the slab height in the structural tab?

     

    Also, is there a better way to add an isolation joint to the perimeter of the slab than using a room molding?

     

    Seems to me basic stuff like the above would in the program somewhere.

    D8AE2631-2F58-4921-9BBE-1F8B0E5F63B2.png

  3. On 11/29/2018 at 10:30 AM, CSPChief said:

    Howdy (1st post!)

     

    Am I missing something but it seems we cannot easily generate production drawings for the builder like rafter profiles, sheating cuts, etc.

    The closest I was able to get was a Wall Production drawing through the wall details view.

     

    More specifically, I'm looking for something to Solid Builder's outputs

    https://digitalcanal.com/sbsite2/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/10-Roof-Production-Drawing.jpg

    https://digitalcanal.com/sbsite2/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/11-Rafter-Profile-Drawings.jpg

     

    Is there an add-on, etc?

     

    Thanks

    Why can’t you just use your Solidbuilder output and add it to your layout?

  4. You might want to check your numbers against the insurance company database.  The insurance adjuster most likely has everything priced out, or at least price guidelines to follow, and you might have a little trouble just pulling numbers out of the air for your quote.

     

    Good luck and keep us posted on how it works out.

  5. I still wonder about how a CAD program that can do all kinds of cool stuff automatically doesn't have the basic function of doing lot and house statistics without the user having to take classes on a programming language.  Every plan that I have done has this requirement by the building dept...

     

    Why don't they buy a macro from one of the power users on here that works and add it to the base program???

     

    Seems to me, adding another couple schedules to the current list would work.

    • Upvote 2
  6. 2 hours ago, DMDesigns said:

    Takes some getting used to - but not bad for instant gratification..!

     

     

    5bd9d341b2dbc_Untitled24.thumb.jpg.6e3d6e66279ccf3a665da6f62206df91.jpg5bd9d340e36a2_Untitled22.thumb.jpg.1c79176baf9138eb3c0f9cbd1d9262b4.jpg

     

    That is quite a kitchen layout there...

     

    I have found if you use framing members instead of soffits for your beams and rafters, the wood grain works better.

    • Like 1
  7. David J Potter makes an excellent point.  Whatever software you decide to use, the results will depend on how much time and effort you put in to master that program.

     

    In fact I follow an architect youtube channel where the man does some beautiful work... and he uses autocad lite.

     

    All that being said, I really enjoy working with Chief Architect.  After all these years, it made designing fun again for me.