Alaskan_Son

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Everything posted by Alaskan_Son

  1. I can't speak to your particular issue, but I can tell you this. I noticed wall alignment issues during the upgrade from X8 to X9. I have yet to report it because I was too busy when I noticed the problem and I just fixed them at that time but I had attic walls that were just ever so SLIGHTLY out of alignment with the walls below. Just enough to have those pesky lines show up in vector views. I just clicked the Align With Wall Below tool for all the offending walls but it was a strange anomaly indeed.
  2. It's because you have no ceiling above that wall to stop it from going all the way up to the roof below. Drag your ceiling planes over to cover those walls. Also, not sure where Gary was talking about, but you definitely should try using the new Shelf Ceiling tool over the room on that side where you have the shelf. It's an extremely handy new tool.
  3. Here are a few potential solutions that come to mind... 1. Go to page zero, group select everything (including the drawing sheet or "Sheet Boundary") and slightly move it. This will require you move everything on your other pages this same direction and distance. If you feel brave, you can move everything all at once (except for the sheet boundary)... Go into a plan view, hit Control+H and draw a small Edit Area Polyline (maybe 4ft. x 4ft.) With the polyline still selected, hit Control+X to cut that polyline Go to layout and hit Control+V to paste the polyline so that it completely envelopes your plan With the polyline still selected, move it the desired amount. My preferred method would be to start dragging, hit tab, and then enter the desired distance and direction. Select the sheet boundary on page zero and move that the same distance and direction. 2. Go to page zero and rearrange your title block. 3. Remove your scale from the title block and place it somewhere else on the sheet. Many people place it just below their layout box or view labels (or whatever you want to call them). Truth is that many plans/pages often have different scales on the same page and so having the scale in the title block isn't always appropriate anyway.
  4. Dan, you should be using a different tool. Like Eric said, just rotate the layout boxes (will require you uncheck "Rotate With Plan" for all your text). OR....Use Edit Area (All Floors), draw a marquis selection around everything and then rotate that. I've suggested in the past that Rotate Plan View be renamed as it causes a lot of confusion in this particular area. What it does is rotate the plan VIEW. In essence, it rotates your drawing board.
  5. In X9 this is completely auto as they added a special "Cabinet Mounted" functionality and setting. In X8 it's a little trickier but doable. You have to add the symbol to your user library, Open Symbol while it is in the library, change the y offset to zero, and under the Options tab change it to Floor Mounted. Now you can use it. OR...place a small section of room divider alongside your cabinet. That works too.
  6. This is just a guess of course but I'm betting it was done with mostly 2D CAD linework. Maybe AutoCAD. Kinda looks like some of the work Johnny has shown from Vectorworks too. The text style looks like an SHX font and the sharp line corners aren't possible in Chief. Also, there are some inconsistencies in the elevation views that wouldn't be there if it were a true 3D model...
  7. Yep. I think this is how I would do it. Even if you need to make changes later. Its only a couple clicks to auto-build roof again and a few seconds to drag the overhang back again.
  8. Custom text macro and a modified font. And yes, I have started displaying my door labels like this as well. The only real downside is that anyone who you want to share the plan file with must also have the same font installed. Pretty minor limitation for most of us, but for those that do a lot of collaborating it's an extra step.
  9. You can also select the light fixture, click on Open Symbol>Options, and uncheck Flush Mounted to keep light from automatically rotating to match sloped ceiling.
  10. Yep. Or search Tiffany chair and there are a few more... https://3dwarehouse.sketchup.com/search.html?q=tiffany chair&backendClass=both
  11. You should be fine. It's just recognizing your newly "repaired" computer as an entirely different computer.
  12. Here's a workaround solution for the living area display... The living area label actually acts like a normal label and there are a few attributes it will recognize such as layer, volume, and "internal_area" (not really sure what others as I haven't tested it that much). Specifically though, the %internal_area% macro will display the living space. It will result in only the area being displayed without units so you can add your own units. Just select the living area label, add %internal_area% to the label and then place a crapload of carriage returns (newlines) to push the automatically created area label down out of the view...either that or just place a mask over the automatically created number. The room area display is possible too but you have to use a custom macro in the actual room label for the area display and manually place a room label with the desired global macros for the rest.
  13. Here's that other discussion Yusef is referring to. The basic idea is the same but will need a little tweaking to make it work for railing panels which among other things need to be converted to "Millwork" symbols instead of "Fixture" symbols.
  14. Hey Yusef, It worked the same in previous versions. Like so many things, I think we've just built off each others ideas. It never occurred to me to bend millwork by attaching it to a window until you brought it up and I think I just took it a step further. I'm guessing it just didn't occur to you to change the millwork to a window symbol first. It always seems so clear afterward.
  15. OOB hotkey for Make Parallel/Perpendicular
  16. Again, this is all controlled via your Camera View Layer Set. Instead of deleting the wall framing just turn off the Framing, Wall layer in your Camera View set.
  17. No. It has be turned off in your camera view layer set though.
  18. As Joe said, the short answer is no, BUT the long answer is yes... There are 3 options if you really want to change the numbering/lettering format: Use a manually placed callout with a custom referenced context macro. This is probably more of a pain than it's really worth IMO. Abandon the callout shape and just use a label. This way is the easiest and is what I personally do most of the time. Chief's automatically produced callout labels look nice and all but they're just far too limiting to me. I'd rather lose the callout shape and get information that's more important to me. This example doesn't have the schedule numbering format changed but using this approach it very easily could have been. Use option 2 and manually place a callout shape around the label for each window. There are a handful of methods you can use to speed this process up too. Probably best to wait till right near the end of the project to add the callout shapes though. Any one of the above options would require at least 2 custom macros though as well as some customization to the schedule. If you need help setting something like that up, please feel free to email me at alaskansons@gmail.com and we can discuss further.
  19. Maybe...except for this error message he mentioned in his second to last post. Sounds like he is properly initiating the ray trace. It's just failing to fully execute.
  20. Like Joe said, Ray Tracing has nothing to do with the video card. It's all CPU. My computer is pretty old and relatively slow and I could easily ray trace your plan...4 passes in right around a minute. I suspect the problem lies with your actual computer. Maybe it's overheating. Try going into Preferences>Render>Ray Trace and turn down the number of cores used to see if that helps.