

ValleyGuy
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Everything posted by ValleyGuy
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@jjifmeyer you could also just use a landing. They work well every time I need outside stairs and seem to be easier to manipulate / move than rooms.
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@MarkMc Wow, thanks Mark, that's some really great points.... a couple of really foreign points too. Hacking up items and the rotating a profile technique sound like fun - not your regular plain vanilla stuff. I'll have to do a little research on it.
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Thanks @DBCooper. There was quiet a few adjustments made to the main base cabinet, way more than I ever do for a kitchen layout. Here is the plan if anyone wants to look at all the fine tuning. It was too large of a zipped file saving all the referenced files, so a zipped plan file is all there is, I hope it works. Custom Dresser.zip
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I had one deck give me the same kind of grief - one side working and one side not. It was a single step and I had two speed bumps. One was, I had resized the deck and accidentally misaligned one edge (not quite 90 degrees). The second was the terrain made the step on one side a hair lower than the other side. It was a rather large deck and the two steps were conceived quite a ways apart. Once I lifted up the step (flattened out the terrain) the magic happened.
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Extension lines in dimension touching walls
ValleyGuy replied to CJordanDesign's topic in General Q & A
I'm not sure what the NKBS standard distance is, but you can adjust it through the dimension defaults under Extensions.- 1 reply
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I am definitely not a cabinet expert, but the final product came out fairly close. I took your need and made it a Saturday morning learning moment for myself. There is all the tools and training videos in Chief to make very nice furniture... I know, because I just had to use the tools and watch a few videos . I suspect you are using a base cabinet to start from. I used another door panel (less the rest of the cabinet) for the top back splash above - the lower part of the door panel is buried in the main cabinet to only reveal the upper 3 sides, 3D solids for the curved feet and main part of the lower valance, a molding poly line for the bead work (wrapped around the front leg sides). I would suggest making the whole thing into a symbol to make it a single piece so you can move it around the plan, or save it into your library. Valance: Start by importing your picture and resizing as needed (FILE at the top header to import, and RH click on the pic to find the Resize Tool). I used 42" wide and it resized the whole dresser pic as per scale. Use a CAD box to start the valance overall size - drawing right over the picture. Add some break points on the bottom edge and use the make curved line tool to add in the valance shapes. Select the poly line shape and convert to a 3D solid, adjust thickness and properly place in plan view. Take a back clipped elevation view of the front and use a CAD line from outside of the leg to the other side (at the valance flat spot height). Use the break tool and curve tool to mirror the bottom of the valance shape. Make this line into a moulding line. Choose a moulding from the library and adjust the size until it looks right. You might need to find the mldg as mine was way way way out in front of where I thought it was going to show up in the camera view - just go back into plan view and move it up to your cabinet to not loose the height of this little mldg and to wrap the mldg line around the sides of the legs. It may need a little more tinkering once you see it in 3D. Note: I had to leave an "Open" space at the bottom of the cabinet (with no bottom) so the main box wasn't visible through the upper curved valance areas. I made the curved feet by drawing over the imported pic and making into a 3D solid just like the valance. It took about an hour and 45 mins to make this final product while watching 4-5 videos (I got side tracked a bit...). This was the first time making a custom piece of furniture like this and I'm pretty sure that I could make the next one much much quicker. I'm sure that there are many ways to achieve this and maybe someone else will be able to enlighten both of us. Good luck with it and welcome to Chief.
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You might want to look at playing around with a shelf ceiling too.
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Style Palette: Door Hardware and Handle Material Change Not Possible
ValleyGuy replied to ValleyGuy's topic in General Q & A
Thanks @DBCooper for putting a second pair of eyes on it. I'll send off a request. -
Style Palette: Door Hardware and Handle Material Change Not Possible
ValleyGuy replied to ValleyGuy's topic in General Q & A
@scottharris Hi Scott, thanks for replying. I should have given more information, it is an interior door. Here is a picture with all the selections chosen. It appears proper in the thumbnail on the right, but not in the plan when applied. I just created a second style palette and tried applying it.... and received the same result. I'm still at a loss to get the handle to change using a style palette. I just used the material painter on the handle as a work around but would like to use only the style palette if possible. Any other suggestions??? -
I need a nudge in the right direction. I decided to give style palettes a try and isolated it down to only base boards and door materials. I just want to change the materials - no features. Base boards worked fabulously, however, I can not seem to get the door hardware and handle to change. I even selected every line property option available with no success. Is there a way to change the hardware and the handle materials?
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I use each type of text. As I use colour in my plans: I have regular text in a blue colour at a specific size for the appropriate SPV - it also has the automatic (blue) arrow. All of my rich text is the colour red and again sized for the SPV requirements. RT has the ability to pull (red) arrows from the text box. So, I have two texts with matching coloured arrows at my finger tips - both used for different types of notes: blue is for DESCRIPTION / IDENTIFICATION type notes, bright red is for DIRECTION / CAUTION type notes.
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Does this get close to what you are after? 1) Make a copy of your plan. 2) In the copy Plan; Make a layer set of just the electrical 3) In the Original Plan: take a back clipped elevation in glass house and turn off the electrical layer. Use reference display of the copy plan electrical only in vector view. (You may want to tone down the glass house colour and make it very transparent.)
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You might also look at a wine room cooler unit. They are small, 110V and can mount inside of the room. I put one in a very small room about that size before.
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I found it.... deck framing isn't fully controlled through the room defaults, double rim boards are controlled via the railing. It seems that different size and material for the outside rim board isn't an option yet, nor is there an option for a thin face trim like a composite deck material. These still need to be manually adjusted / made. Not quite there yet, but definitely a great improvement.
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The separate window layer only takes care of the windows not showing. Only doing this step will leave the opening lines. Turning the wall lines to white should make all of the wall opening lines the same colour as the background page.... unless your background isn't white. What colour are your 'doorway opening' lines?
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This might work for you, all on the same floor.
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Best Practices for Storing and Applying Keynotes and Notes
ValleyGuy replied to skoz44's topic in General Q & A
For General Notes: I have a text box in my plan template on a CAD sheet - all the stuff that shoves some of the legal responsibilities back onto the General Contractor, things like verification / changes / dewatering monitoring and documenting / engineering... general code compliant designer responsibilities that are usually beyond our control. This is embedded into the Layout Template and is always present. It rarely changes and basically spells out that the general contractor is responsible to know, understand, and follow all of the local governing compliances. For Key Notes: I just use Note schedules like Alan has above. However, I drive all the note information from the Saved Plan View. I don't arrow up and down between floor plans, each floor plan has it's own Saved Plan View. This creates independent Active View Defaults, to which I can use the Edit Active View button and have made Note Defaults for each SPV. I make a Note Schedule for each floor and leave all the schedules on one common saved CAD sheet. I leave each schedule populated with the common items and when I drop a note on a particular floor - because I'm on that specific saved plan view, it automatically picks up the appropriate note number and populates the appropriate schedule. I may have 10 notes on the main floor and only 6 on the upper floor. The common things like 'Grab bar blocking required' (as was requested by the building officials to be on the plans) doesn't need to be typed in as it is already saved in the schedule. Items like ' In-floor electrical heating mat under ceramic tile' only takes a minute to type - usually less time than searching for a cut and paste. Saved CAD sheets also have their own Active Defaults that I have also made specific note defaults and specific note schedules for, just like SPV's. Drop a note on the CAD sheet and it will populate that schedule to then be sent to the layout. Driving the Note Defaults from the Saved Plan View works well for me with revisions too. I have a SPV for Revisions that also has it's own Note Defaults and Note Schedule. When I'm with a customer and they want to change something, I switch to the Revisions SPV and drop a note, the note has it's own shape and is coloured red, it automatically populates the red coloured Schedule I have saved in the plan under the drawing for easy review. One thing I try to do is not over think the key notes and draw a line at what information needs to be relayed. I tend to include code items requested by the building officials, customer selections, and items To Be Determined. For example, I don't put stair code in a note schedule as the specific plan rise and run are noted in the stair detailed drawing. Code stair min and max sizes are just as important as the size and length of the nails used to secure the studs to the plate, or the bolt size and throw for a deadbolt lock. With thousands of pages of code and endless manufacturer installation requirements, one has to decide how much information are you going to include before your construction drawings become adequate enough to meet your "Designer / Architect Responsibilities" as stated in the code. -
Do conditioned unfinished basement rooms count as square footage
ValleyGuy replied to GeneDavis's topic in General Q & A
As far as permits here, the local counties make up their own rules. In my county, they treat permits like taxes - charge for everything then make up crap to gouge some more!! We pay for everything in the house, and for garages as well. However, garages do have a different sq ft rate than the house. Want to do anything over $10k, you need to pay for a permit - even if they will not be required to inspect anything. It's crazy, if you replace your flooring and it costs over $10k, you need to get a permit - the permit cost rate is based on the total expense of the job. We even need a permit to transport your baby barn shed if you want to take it with you when you move. On the positive side, there isn't much confusion whether or not you have to pay for a permit ..... only how much are you going to pay, and how long will the job be held up waiting to receive the permit. -
As @Renerabbitt has stated, its the wall layer direction. The wall layer direction not only plays a role in the label, but also if you have doors with handles only on one side. I have closet doors (ball catch type) with dummy handles only on the door exterior. To have it show properly in 3D as well as show properly in my schedules, the exterior of the door (with the handles) seems to always be on the exterior of the wall layers side - which makes sense.
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Adjustable Space Planning Boxes. All of the Deck and Handrail / Newel upgrades. The multiple Schedule updates and abilities. Definitely upgrades and steps in the right direction. I haven't used all the new trinkets yet, but these are my favourites so far.
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X16 Beta to Full Release, What is the procedure?
ValleyGuy replied to ValleyGuy's topic in General Q & A
Thanks Rene. -
X16 Beta to Full Release, What is the procedure?
ValleyGuy replied to ValleyGuy's topic in General Q & A
Thanks Rene, do I need to remove the X16 Beta first, or just instal and it will rewrite? -
I've never went from Beta to Full Release before. I'm currently using the Beta version and want to upgrade to the full release version. Do I just load the current X16 from the locker? Are there any unique steps involved to keep or save anything (files, etc...) from Beta? Thanks, Shayne
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Here are the scale bars. It seems I have a very simplistic way of dealing with all the scale issues I read about. In my residential home construction world today, there is only one semi-important point, and one really important point when it comes to printing at scale. 1) I send all things that will be scaled to the layout in increments of what you would find on a scale ruler. This I found isn't really important to too many people as most now are only reading the measurements provided, or working off of a monitor with a cursor type tape measure. Most trades here don't want paper anymore, they just want digital plans sent to them, even the permit office and building suppliers. Putting things to the layout as per scale ruler sizing is more for my OCD and a few out in the field still using a tape on proper sized plans. I actually very rarely even supply any paper copies to my clients. ...times are a changing! 2) As I only use a layout sheet for 11x17 size, I always Export to PDF using: fit to paper at 100%. Everyone using a commonly found 11x17 printer can print the emailed PDF at 100% and it scales perfectly every time. The odd few that want bigger, print at 200% and get properly scaled 22"x34". I found that most of the digital world advancement messed up any control that I would have in putting the plans onto paper anyhow. Instead of trying to fight it, I decided to just include a scale bar to control things out on the job site. In the real world, different guys show up with all different sizes of plans with their own doodling and coffee stains, they don't care - they just use their cigarette package and a pen to make a distance that they want from the paper plan they have and hold it up to the scale bar to guess how long it is- easy peasy. All of the important technical measurements are included and any scale measuring is usually for estimating only. The scale bar isn't used that often, or even at all according to some guys. As far as how readable the the plans are, I have different saved dims and text layers for each SPV, Elevation, X-Section, CAD, Layer set... On my 27" monitor, a 11x17 piece of paper fits almost perfectly to my screen if my library is open and tool bars are present. So what I am looking at on the monitor is the same size of what the printed paper page will look like (at Drawing Scale: fit to page at 100%). If I can't read it on the monitor, I won't be able to read it on the paper - adjust as necessary.