Richard_Morrison

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Posts posted by Richard_Morrison

  1. Ask the builder to send you his pricing breakdown in electronic format before the contract is awarded. Only fair. Of course, no telling where that might end up. (LOL.)

     

    One thing you can say to your FIL is that it is important that all bidders have identical information so it is an apples-to-apples comparison. This bidder sounds like 1) he wants an advantage over other bidders with material takeoffs, 2) he is hoping to get you out of the way once work starts, 3) sees some pre-drawn work he wouldn't mind using. I would not put up with this, nor should your FIL. You want to help your FIL, but he should be willing to help you, too. As a last resort, tell your FIL that you would be willing to share the file with the successful bidder, if necessary, after the contract is awarded. 

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  2. Dropbox has been VERY fast, but I haven't compared it to Drive in a speed test. It would be worth finding out how long it takes for yours to sync. If it's working for you, then no need to change. But if you aren't happy with Drive, then no need to just give up on the concept of having the Data Folder in the Cloud.

  3. I think there may be a problem in that if you upgrade your X6 to Beta X7, your Activation Code gets replaced with the new X7 activation code. So if you don't have a valid X7 license when the release is out, you may be SOL in trying to get back to your old X6 activation number. I find it interesting that people believe that with an SSA, they have some sort of "right" to an unreleased beta version, even if only temporary.

  4. I am liking the public beta pretty well, and it seems to be very solid. However, I just wasted an hour or so trying to figure out why some CAD lines were displaying properly in the live elevation, but would completely disappear when sent to layout. Turns out that any CAD drawn on the layer "Cross Section Lines" will not display at all in layout. Maybe this will save someone some grief. I have reported this, of course.

  5. Well, even the X7 documentation only talks about "polyline-based objects" having holes, with no reference to 2D or 3D. It never occurred to me that a simple fill was a "polyline-based object," I guess, thinking that this phrase referred to a polyline solid. slab, countertop, or even a landing. Maybe this will help someone else who is a victim of unclear documentation.

  6. I just discovered that you can cut a hole in a selected 2D polyline fill using the "Create Hole" tool on the Edit Toolbar. I THINK this is a new feature, because I recollect only being able to do this with 3D objects previously. Even better is that you can take the 2D fill with a hole and convert it to a polyline solid, say, and the hole is already there. The fill appears to calculate area correctly taking into account the removed area, too. I like this a lot, and would be very sad to learn that I missed it in X6, but better late than never!

  7. Have you ever wished for semi transparent solid fills on polylines or other objects? It's in there.

     

     

    This is now one of my favorite features. One of Chief's shortcomings has been the lack of an easy way to "gray down" distant parts of the building in an exterior elevation, or to show an addition vs. existing. Throwing on a white semi-transparent fill on a distant garage, say, really makes those elevations "pop"!

  8. In an elevation, the X, Y, and Z axes stay the same as the plan view. So it's possible that when you think you are transforming left to right (you may be assuming an X-direction), you are actually transforming in/out (y-direction in plan) without realizing it. (also, trying to transforming up/down in an elevation is actually moving in the z-axis) This is very confusing behavior, and I wish that Chief would fix it. Or at least give a visual cue as to the actual axes. 

  9. Yes but if you have a window in the middle of a wall break, you are going to rebuild the whole wall anyway. I'd show it as it really is. Your doing it the hard way.

    Well, my point is that if you don't have wall breaks, you don't need to rebuild the wall. That seems like the hard way to me.

  10. Been playing around with this, and it's coming back to me. The main problem with breaking walls to get a siding change is that any windows or doors spanning the break create problems. The wall material region resolves this issue nicely, since windows cut it just fine.

  11. I considered that, Perry, but have had issues of losing room definitions and other weirdness (which I can't recall right now). It seems safer to keep it as a single wall. I usually do the same if there are multiple patches in plan. I use multiple wall hatching entities rather than break the wall in multiple places. Could be this issue is fixed now, though.

  12. I find myself needing to model an existing house that wraps siding around the corner. (See 2nd floor, attached) I am guessing that a wall material region is the way to go rather than a thin polyline solid, but is there any reason to choose one vs. the other? Or some other approach?

     

    (BTW, I hate "stage sets" like this with a passion. LOL)

    post-214-0-35066800-1421339481_thumb.jpg

  13. Julie,

    If you are in a relatively urban area with significant regulatory controls, I encourage you to engage a local architect to help expedite the process. Such an architect would be available to make site visits during construction, too, when issues come up.

     

    BTW, it is illegal in every state that I know of to offer "architectural design" without actually being a licensed architect.