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Everything posted by GeneDavis
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The room is under a roof framed with 16" i-joists. I want to cut some 4" dia. holes, and placed a CAD circle, but it won't convert to ceiling hole.
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Use the room dividers and put them on a layer you can turn off. Room def defines ceiling structure.
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Changing Floor Joist Size--Is this the mortal sin of Chief?
GeneDavis replied to Ed_Orum's topic in General Q & A
Floor structure is a room setting not a joist setting. You don't edit the joists for height. You edit the floor structure of the room. With autoframing on, Chief will change the joists from whatever to your new whatever height. What was it, 9.5 but needing 11.875. -
Ryan said it and I said it way upthread. It's not done in Chief. You rotate in your printing program. Here is an image of a page of a print set. The page orientation is landscape, but as can be seen, I rotated it in Adobe for printing in portrait mode.
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Can't get edited 2D CAD block to work with symbol
GeneDavis replied to GeneDavis's topic in General Q & A
I ended up doing the smoothing angle thing, doing a regen of the CAD block, then SAVING not just closing. Thanks, all. -
A pedestal sink in the Chief Kohler manufacturer library has incorrect 3D, so I got a good one from Kohler and inserted it. The generated 2D CAD block is inadequate for 2D plan view, so I opened it in CAD Block management. The images below show the plan view with the auto-generated CAD block that doesn't pick up the lines from Kohler's 3D, a 3D view, how the block looks in the dialog box, and how it looks after I edited it in CAD. Why are my edits not taking?
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Delete molding this segment only, but cannot select molding p'line
GeneDavis replied to GeneDavis's topic in General Q & A
Thanks, Brett. That did it. -
Did you build your layout page? If not, you will need to do that. There are no already-built layout pages for portrait oriented sheets. You can scratch-build your layout page with borders, titles, revision lists, page number, date, all that stuff, or you can take one of the prebuilt templates and rotate it, borders and all, and then edit from there. Is the plan fully annotated for sending views to layout? Rotating a plan is easy. Edit>Edit Area>Edit Area (All Floors) will do what you want, but if you are fully annotated, there is gonna be a lot of editing to rotate all the text and other anno elements that need it.
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If we want program-generated pitch labels, someone ought to think it through carefully and describe how it might be used in producing con-doc layout views, and then write it up as a suggestion. Is it a triangle or an ell? There are votes for each way. How high up from the roof plane? Is it text-filled or not? Certainly not wanting to see it on every single plane of a complex roof arrangement, how do we deselect the planes for which we want to turn off the feature? And remember, you are in elevation view when you make that judgement, and you cannot select a plane whose baseline is normal to the viewing plane. You are gonna need to make that selection in a 3D view or a plan view, so you will want to split the screen. Or do we want to activate this new anno tool in 2D section or elevation and have Chief auto annotate any angled line in the view, so we can simply click those few places we want a pitch label. Does it need to work in a live view and a plot lines view? I know this thread is not about whether to use pitch labels in elevations or sections, or when and how much to use them, but I offer here, just for discussion, an example from Chief of a house with a complex multi pitch roof with very spare use of pitch marks in the elevations. Take a look. I have only shown images of the sheets with the exterior elevations, but if you look close at this, a house with about 20 roof planes, only 4 are labeled. But in the full file, which you can go and open and examine, there is a roof plan in which every plane is auto labeled and section views of everything with pitch triangle labels in those structural section views, all to guide the truss builder. There are different pitches. As I asked upthread, who is it that needs this information? Has a client ever asked you to change a pitch to a specific number other than maybe a 12? If a client needs to see the numbers, do they want it on every single plane in those elevation views? I don't bother with them anymore in elevation views, but do put them in the section views that are needed for roof cutters and truss designers. And I am certainly in favor of a tool which can automate that. It's a nice challenge for the Chief coders.
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You want to rotate your layout so it can print on roll paper 36" wide? Or do you want a drawing that READS in portrait mode? Please clarify. Because if it is the first, it is done at the printer, not in Chief.
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The pics are of what you did? Looks like you have it solved.
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I've come around from annotating it on elevations, to doing a roof plan view with every plane labeled for pitch, and enough 3D for the builder to see what is to be done. I leave it off the 2D elevations. I think owner's don't care much about the numbers, but focus instead on the look. Steep. Flat. Flatter. Whatever. The roof cutter or the truss designer needs the pitches, so it's there in the roof plan, and I put it in the whole-building section views.
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Got spooked about the blue by a bad print job
GeneDavis replied to GeneDavis's topic in General Q & A
In PREFERENCES my setting was to grayscale, which I believe is OOB X15, as I cannot remember ever changing it. Same for all previous X Chief updates. I toggle color on an off all the time and expect to see shades of gray for wall fills. Fills go to white when the PREF button for b&w is checked. I printed the .pdf in b&w. -
Thanks @DBCooper. In that second video it opens with the camera in what appears to be floor overview, but I see no option in 3D walkthrough camera specification to get that camera, which seems to have all roofs and ceilings turned off.
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This place pumps out a model every couple days and posts to YouTube. Walk-through videos done quite nicely. Every room seen from all the angles needed to understand the plan. I'd like to see a Chief tutorial showing how to do the path and cameras for any one room done like what you see here. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_INnPmZUjPU&loop=0
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Got spooked about the blue by a bad print job
GeneDavis replied to GeneDavis's topic in General Q & A
The file I sent is a single page excerpt from the full set I had printed at ThePlanPrinter.com, which came back deathly pale. -
Got spooked about the blue by a bad print job
GeneDavis replied to GeneDavis's topic in General Q & A
Could it be that printing it with "color" not checked, results in a .pdf that gives the washed out look? I always sent to .pdf before with color checked, and assumed that clients printed in b&w. This time I did the .pdf owner review set color unchecked. That is what you see. Where is the "greyscale" option when printing to .pdf? I don't see it in any of my .pdf options. I have Chief .pdf and Microsoft .pdf options, plus two desktop letter-sized printers, each at locations four to six states distant. My summer and fall digs has no printer, but I can motor down the mountain to the little local library and print to letter size. Maybe I should be doing that on a test page, printing to 8.5 x 11, before shipping to an online print source. -
Got spooked about the blue by a bad print job
GeneDavis replied to GeneDavis's topic in General Q & A
Thanks @Chrisb222! See how this page prints. The page I have has the anno so light it almost creates eye strain to read, and the Simpson instructions I put on the lower R (an image from a screencap) came out like it's bleached. test page roof framing.pdf -
Post the plan, give us your roof load specs for snow and live, and someone, me included, will show you how to truss it. Make sure we get the barn, too. In the mean time, get your supplier's field guy to visit your site and scope out the delivery situation. I just did an i-joist roof frame in snow country with 110 psf ground snow load, but we have no saguaros here, only huge white pines. One lane curvy road going to. Driveway impossible turn.
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OOB X15 comes with many already-built SPVs, and plenty of text styles, dimension defaults, and layer sets already built. There is a lot of the use of blue colors for annotation in the OOB setup. The OOB framing for ceilings, floors, and roofs come with the planview lines in colors. So there is a lot of blue, in various shades (I think) in OOB planview objects and annotation. I rarely see my plans on paper, shipping finished work off as PDF files, and the clients and suppliers print. Wanting to see how a new plan I am completing now looks for real, I went online, and chose a guy up north of Detroit, ThePlanPrinter.com, to use for a single set of full sized check prints. They arrived and are almost unreadable in many instances, pages 1 thru 16. I though he was running out of ink, or was using ink that was tending to gray and not full black, and reacted by calling him and complaining. I could tell in the conversation he wasn't going to pay for another print and ship cost, not from the same file, nor did I really want him to do that. So I ended up blaming the blues. And then over-reacted by going through the file and its setup, changing line color and text and all other anno to black. I now think I did not have to do this, or did I? No one's ever said before, hey, all your prints look pale and washed out and it's hard to read the detail. Do you use the OOB blues?
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Arrows and their layers, and SPV for different scale
GeneDavis replied to GeneDavis's topic in General Q & A
Solved it, Joe. Thanks for looking. I had "set up" the new default set for the new SPV, but I had not saved it, so the default set was not and could not be active. -
I'm having trouble understanding the right way to annotate a framing plan view done to a different scale than my standard 1/4" = 1'. There is a lot of detail in one small part of a roof framing plan, so I want a way to have a 1/2" = 1' view I can annotate to send to layout. So I thought I'd need a new SPV, right? Because I already have a SPV for roof framing, and it is for 1/4" scale, and I don't want this view to be showing any existing anno from that 1/4" SPV. The only thing I need to have in this view, anno-wise, is text, dimensions, and the arrows used with text. My anno practice for text with an arrow is to draw the text, then draw a text line with arrow. Maybe I should change that practice and do it in reverse, using the leader line thing which generates an arrow from its arrowhead end and then can have rich text input, but that is a whole different topic. For now, I don't want to change. Text first, then text line with arrow. So I set up a default set, "Framing Default Set, Roof, 1/2" scale." Also set up layers for text, dimensions, and CAD for this 1/2" scale view, all called 1/2" scale framing, roof. With this all set up, I could then do the specs for the new SPV I created for roof framing at 1/2" scale. I did that. But I cannot get the arrows to draw into the layer I want. They want to come in to the layer for Electrical. I am confused about drawing an anno arrow using "text line with arrow." Why is this so hard? Is my strategy wrong? When wanting to generate a view at a new scale, don't we need to do it using a SPV?
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Looks like a Houzz pic, with the little white price tags.
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NY concrete slab for attached garage - foundation stamp?
GeneDavis replied to Doyle670's topic in General Q & A
The building itself includes the foundation. The drawings provided by the supplier of the preengineered steel building are of little interest to the AHJ, just as is the engineered roof truss supplier drawings for a wood framed roof in a building. You're gonna have to pay a pro with a NY seal.