JKEdmo

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Everything posted by JKEdmo

  1. I tried trim, but with no success. Wound up making a duplicate copy.
  2. Is it possible to split a roof plane into two separate planes? Trim command? Thanks, Jim
  3. What if you are on the equator? Thanks to all. Jim
  4. Thank Scott. I was not aware walls will "flip" to outside when forming a room. Jim
  5. I have a quick question: I've read that drawing walls in a clockwise manner is recommended practice. I was wondering why and if this is still relevant with latest releases such as X15. Thank you, Jim
  6. Me too -- to down-save Autocad to earlier versions. It's free from Autodesk. Not sure if there is a Mac version. PC version works well.
  7. Good morning, I'm finding the cutouts of the doors in my garage are showing up in my foundation level below. I think there is an "easy" fix to this, but I can't remember(!). Plan attached. Any input would be appreciated. Thank you, Jim LEVEL1: LEVEL 0: PLAN.zip
  8. Kelly, I've come across these wall finish gaps before. But, I never thought to adjust in plan, just in elevation. To clarify, plan is the way to go? Jim
  9. Take a look at the Calculated Fire Resistant method outlined in the CBC, Chapter 7, 722.6 Wood Assemblies. It applies to walls up to 1 hour rating. It essentially allows a way to demonstrate a one-hour wall rating without the need to cite a tested assembly number. I think this method is often overlooked and is easier. Alternately, Section 721 "Prescriptive Fire Resistance" should have a good assembly I believe. Table 721.2(2), Item 15.
  10. Thanks Perry for quick response. I need to explode the bay unit, to get at the Walls / Room, right? Jim
  11. To be honest, I only got in 2-3 years of hand drafting before the office switched to CAD (Spirit Cad). Mid-90s. I envy people who have more hand drafting experience than I do. I think the beauty of hand drafting is its economy -- you learn to shown what's essential and not much more. Kind of opposite of what I call "the Tyranny of CAD", where you are tempted to draw every last nut and bolt regardless of scale. Jim
  12. Bit of a weird one. Is a bay window unit supposed to generate a room label? I know the label is associated with the bay window because when I delete the bay unit the label goes away.
  13. My first job was in Germany with hand drafting. That's the way we did doors at least in schematics. It occurs to me reading the replies maybe it's a European and Oceania thing and therefore not familiar to Americans. Jim
  14. Tea Time - that's great! Thanks again, Jim
  15. Good morning, X14 had a graphical overview of items at the folder level I found really useful: Does anyone know how to turn this on in X15? It does not show at the folder level: Thanks again, Jim
  16. Thank you Ryan for your advice. Jim
  17. In plan, I set the Room Specification / Fill Style option to show an existing diagonal tile pattern in a master bathroom: The pattern fills the defined rooms perfectly, but not into the door opening. Is there a workaround for this? Thanks again, Jim
  18. Thanks Glenn and Ryan for both your input. I guess having a placeholder note off to the side is the way to go. It did not occur to me you can have the note callouts in the cad detail next to the schedule. Seems like that's a good way to have your schedule "preloaded" with standard notes you use before they get placed in plan. Jim
  19. Ok, Joe. I get it. You don't like it. Still, it's a thing. Some people like it graphically, and the OP was interested. Indeed, Autocad and Archicad offer the straight door swing option, so maybe Chief would consider it too. Good night, Jim
  20. It's a carryover from hand drafting. Faster to draw an angled line than an arc. In any case, having another option not the end of the world. Looks good in schematic drawings. Just a matter of taste. Jim
  21. Sometimes see straight door wings on schematic plans. It's a nice look in my opinion. Autocad Architecture has it (see below). Might be something for Chief to consider. Seems like it'd be easy to program, but of course that's an easy claim by a non-programmer. Jim