JKEdmo

Members
  • Posts

    730
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by JKEdmo

  1. Thanks Bob for the tip. I was wondering if you can snap to the midpoint of the door jambs themselves in plan, but it appears no. I guess I'll have to eyeball it. Jim
  2. Good morning, I often draw cad lines at door openings to show a finish flooring change. Is there a way to snap to the midpoint of the door jamb casing to accurately place the line? I'm finding no, but maybe I'm overlooking something. Thanks, Jim
  3. Thanks for looking. I'll read up on your tips. Jim
  4. Thanks. I clouded the intersection. Jim TEST.plan
  5. Hmmm, I'll rephrase. I guess my question is about how Chief resolves these tee intersections. When my walls are set up with main layers defined like this: Why does Chief resolve the intersection like this, with an offset intersection. The 3 main layer planes do not intersect. Is this a quirk or maybe I'm missing something? If quirk, maybe the question is more for Chief as you said. Thanks, Jim
  6. Eric, I suppose curious if this is "normal" behavior or if I'm doing something wrong. I know about the manual edit layer tool. So, I know about that fix. I guess I would have expected automatic cleanup to happen at the intersection of main wall layers... Thanks, Jim
  7. Good morning, Quick question about wall cleanup behavior. I have 3 exterior wall types coming together in a T condition. 2 same and 1 similar (grey fill): They have their main layers defined as outer face of stud. I select each separately below to illustrate this: What I don't understand is why the wall cleanup occurs at the middle of the wall and not at the face of studs of the 3 walls. In other words, my expectation would be the grey solid would stop at the right side where the intersection of the 3 main wall layers occurs and not in the middle of the tee intersection. Your insight would be appreciated. Thanks again, JIm
  8. I'm a licensed architect so professional enough I suppose. In my case I was quite happy with Autocad Architecture having used it for years. However, the aggressive price of Chief convinced me to try their product. Cost was not the only factor, but it sure helped.
  9. Price vs. features. I felt it was very competitive compared to other products such as Vectorworks, Autocad Architecture, etc. You might even say I made the jump because of the lower cost.
  10. I'm a Chief newbie and I'd like to add that a big reason I bought X14 was its value relative to its competitors. For what it's worth, that's my two cents! Jim
  11. You might double check the zoning code to see if certain projections above height limit are allowable, eg. chimneys, antennae, etc. Just a thought. Here's an example from project I'm working on. Jim
  12. Oh, I may have figured it out. Is it just a matter of manually dragging the dimension nodes / markers after the dimension is placed? Jim
  13. Good morning, I have a shower enclosure that I'm dimensioning (see screenshot). The wall type is: I'd like to dimension to the shower curb below rather than to the glass above. I'm having trouble finding the setting. Any tips would be appreciated. Thank you, Jim
  14. Ironically, I'm currently working on a similar project with a roof deck and I haven't given vents one thought until now. Thanks for bringing to my attention Alan. Jim
  15. First gut reaction is you probably need to provide a vertical element to house the vent. I have worked on multifamily housing with roof decks and this was handled with a "chimney" to house these vents. But, perhaps others can chime in. Jim
  16. Thanks DB for the tip. Jim
  17. Thanks to all for the workarounds. I sent a feature request to Chief for their consideration. Maybe there are good technical reasons for the current way it works. Seems to me though that the ability to relocate the graphical tag from the camera might be a nice ease of use addition. Jim
  18. Michael, I just discovered that. I changed the default setting in Walls, Pony Wall and got the desired result. Thanks to all for help. Jim
  19. Kelly, The Wall, Railing layer is turned on in my Electrical Plan View. Jim
  20. Good morning, I have a shower curb showing in my Working Plan View. The shower wall is built as framed pony wall below with shower glass above. When I switch to Electrical Plan View, the curb disappears. I just want to switch the layer back on so it shows in Electrical Plan View, but I cannot find the specific layer. I looked under Walls, searched for "partial", "low", etc., but no luck. Does anyone know the name of the layer? Thanks, Jim
  21. Jim, Thanks for the idea. I get it now. Seems like a clever solution! Jim
  22. Thank you for your feedback. Sounds like the workaround is to put the cameras on a layer that can be turned off. The callouts can be "dumb" and graphical only. Maybe I'll suggest this to Chief as a possible feature. Seems like a relocated callout could have a reference leader / anchor back to it's actual location in the room. Maybe this reference leader appears when you click on the callout. Jim
  23. When space is tight I sometimes set my interior elevation tags outside of a room. Is it possible to relocate the camera callouts in this way, but still have the cameras remain inside the room to generate the needed wall elevations? Highlight below shows where I would relocate the tags for example. Thanks, Jim
  24. Thanks Scott. I'll take a closer look at this. Would Chief consider giving the user some ability to customize the dimension string order/heirarchy in a future version? My habit is dimensioning from outside in, i.e. overall exterior first, then exterior window and door openings and lastly interior walls. Jim