JKEdmo

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Everything posted by JKEdmo

  1. Is this a new X15 thing? I'm still on X14. Jim
  2. Good morning, I'm looking for the setting that controls wall siding overlap on floor below. My siding overlaps my concrete slab. See snapshots below. I'd like to turn this off and show the siding stopping at the top of the slab. Once again, thanks for the help! Jim
  3. Thanks! That's what I was looking for. Very good tip. Jim
  4. OK, I see inswing and outswing is controllable (I knew that already and spaced out!). But is there a way to reverse the door swing direction on the fly before placement? If there is, I don't know the technique. Thanks, Jim
  5. Regarding door placement tool: Does Chief have any hotkeys that toggle the door orientation during placement? For example, toggle between inswing / outswing and left / right? Thanks, Jim
  6. Sort of related to this topic... I was looking at Alan's problem and immediately thought create a custom window type and name it "direct set." But, then I noticed that -- unlike doors -- there are only predefined window types and no way to add a Library window type. I wonder why Chief does not allow custom windows? Object-wise, they are pretty much the same thing. Am I missing something? Jim
  7. If I may answer. The text size is worked out based on plan scale factor -- 1:48, 1:96, etc. Let's say you want your printed plan scale to be 1/4" = 1'-0". The true scale of that is really 1:48, i.e. every 1/4" printed represents 1 foot in real life (There are forty-eight 1/4 inches in 1 foot). So, the question is how big do I need to draw the text in "real life" CAD size so that on the print sheet it comes in (48 times smaller) at 3/32"? x = CAD text size x / 48 = 3/32" x = 4.5" Other scales work same. For example, 1/8" = 1'-0" is 1:96. So, x = (96)(3/32") = 9" text size. (Note that 3/32" is approximately 10 point font. Some jurisdictions request 12 point font, which is 1/8" size text. You'd just adjust accordingly.) Jim
  8. Thank you both Steve and Jason. I appreciate your quick responses. I guess the trick is just to do manual roofs right away. I'll give it a try. Curious, as "Chief whizzes", do you tend to rely on automatic roofs or do you just do manual roofs? Jim
  9. Good morning, I've been struggling the last hour in getting a vaulted shed roof to plug back into a gable roof. The shed roof portion is a later master bedroom addition built onto a mid-century house. This addition roof drains back to the gable roof of the main house. (It's the short addition below at the top right of plan). Any help would be appreciated. I'm guessing the roofs could be auto-generated, but I'm not understanding the correct settings. I've attached a zipped plan. Thanks again! Jim AS-BUILTS.zip
  10. Thank you. I was trying to understand how the tool behaves, and this helps. Jim
  11. Good morning, Maybe a nit-pick, but when I wire up my sconce to a light switch, the auto-wiring goes to the face of the wall sconce globe and not to center of the base, which I would prefer. So, I wind up manually adjusting the arc segment. My question is what controls/defines the snap points of the electrical wiring tool? Is this something defined in the fixture block? Default: My preference: Thanks again, Jim
  12. I'd consider overframing a cricket. It could shed down to the corner. I think you could then hold the roof rake/fascia up to allow drainage below and around. Jim
  13. That fixed it. Thanks for the quick reply! Jim
  14. Plan uploaded. - JimTEST.zip
  15. Good morning, Trying to figure out why I have a second dashed line at the edge of my stair plan about 1/4" outside of the stair width itself. What controls this? Also, the railing seems to align with this too. How can I get the railing to align with edge of stair? Zoomed in: Once again, thanks for your help. Jim
  16. Thanks! Made me laugh, which I needed. Jim
  17. Yes, I did that on purpose. I wanted the 2-story stairwell to have flush walls top to bottom at the interior and no horizontal shelf as you go down the stairs. Alternately, I could do a double stud wall on the upper floor, but I settled on this. But, these non-aligned / non-stacking walls are creating the issue. I built small roofs over the concrete walls to represent flashing. Not certain if this is the simplest or most elegant solution, but seems to work. I appreciate everyone's insight. Jim
  18. Good morning, I have a stairwell that extends from the basement to the first floor above. The basement is below grade. I have my basement foundation walls with full 2x4 furred walls at the interior, all part of one wall type. On the first floor, I've decided to frame my 2x4 stairwell walls directly on top of the furred walls below rather than on the concrete foundation walls. These framed walls will step back from the concrete foundation wall below and will be flashed. Anyhow all seemed great... But, as soon as I built my shed roof over the stairwell, the concrete foundation walls below extended to the new roof above in front of the framed walls. How would you handle this? Would you manually edit the tops of the concrete walls? Another thought I had was build little roofs over the concrete walls -- essentially the flashing -- to stop the walls. Thanks in advance, Jim
  19. That's probably the best habit. Along these lines, do you happen to know if Chief ever "retires" libraries or are they more or less always available on their website? Jim
  20. You probably could. I'm on a PC, and the file just winds up in my "downloads" folder, which I empty from time to time. Here's more info on the process: https://www.chiefarchitect.com/support/article/KB-00090/obtaining-library-content.html Jim
  21. Rick, When I download a new library file from Chief, I just double click the file and it self-installs. Jim
  22. I believe it's caused by this setting under Preferences / Appearance. If you set it to "0" then text will not adjust when you scroll in or out.