GeneDavis

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Everything posted by GeneDavis

  1. Cannot remember whether X10 had structural member reporting. Do you see it in the defaults: Tools > Materials List > Structural Member Reporting? You have to set this up (if it is there in X10) to get framing to report piece counts in your specified lengths.
  2. It's in a castle! One thing I enjoyed when visiting Europe, was seeing how cool modern interiors came out in 800-year-old buildings.
  3. Every manually drawn roof plane is born a rectangle. You edit them to the shapes needed. You use the join tool when editing to make ridges, hips, and valleys.
  4. Shown in pics here are my default settings, in which can be seen two adjustable shelves at 1" thickness equally spaced, and the wall cab in place with no shelves. I want the open face look for this cabinet, meaning a faceframe with open center, but the cabinet is a frameless with a fixed panel door and the panel in the 5 piece door specified as insulation air gap material. The camera view shows the panel correctly. The cabinet has no shelves and the shelf option is grayed out when I open the front to specify and select the door.
  5. Will the plan used in the new features video be available for downloading?
  6. Two reasons: 1.) placement, and 2.) their layer is turned on.
  7. I've done it using 3D Warehouse split firewood, but it adds way to much poly count to the model. Images on solid blocks would be much better. Is this the way those are done? I did not download the symbols.
  8. Am I missing it somewhere? I set up framing defaults for my floor one deck to be I-joists with 1-1/8" engineered lumber rims. For decks, I set up the default to be a specified depth for framing (the OOB is 2x8, i.e., 7.25 deep members), but cannot find a way to set the spec for rims. Thus, when I autoframe a deck, the rims get framed with 1-1/8 thick engineered lumber stock, at the deck-frame depth of 7.25". I have to tediously edit the deck frame to be P.T. lumber 2x8. Why? And why can't we get the same "max length" thing for deck rims for material list counts, like we can for the house floor frame rims?
  9. Finally digging into this after getting some help from various helpful contributors here, I see the ways to get my wall plates counted in 16 foot lengths, same for rim board (decks still an issue), same for mudsills, I'd like an easier more global way to do the setup. For wall plates, one has to go into each wall type to make the setting. If you have gone beyond OOB setup for walls, it needs to be done for each and every new wall type you define. For mudsills, since the pressure treated mud sill is considered an element of the foundation wall and not an element of framing, one does the setting inside the wall, also. For rimboard, the setup is done inside the framing default. I find it all tedious, and would rather have something inside the framing defaults for specifying max length (a misleading term and should be better described) for these framing elements.
  10. Custom macros are a mystery to me and if it's going to be a requirement for full use of Chief, I'm going to need training videos to show me how. I don't see any now.
  11. For a hipped roof, is ridge vent counted for half of all roof edge join in any single plane? Thus vent count for all hips? For any roof, is ridge vent counted for roof overhang? We've never done vented caps outboard of the gable walls?
  12. Chief generates and reports quantity for ridge caps. There is no way in Chief to place or count ridge vent.
  13. It's not that intuitive, but you can set up your file using a framing defaults and wall specs, plus material list to do the "buy list" reporting, and get pieced framing like what one does at build time. By that I mean mudsills, wall plates, and deck rims modeled and reported in the material list in your specified max lengths. If for example you have set your wall plate max at 16 feet, the count is going to give you, for a 17 foot wall, one 16 foot piece, and one one foot piece, and it is tallying the one foot piece with other shorties from elsewhere in the build, to cut from 16 foot pieces. What Chief does not do, but what a framer does, is cut the 16 footer back to the nearest stud or joist center, so the butt joint falls on a member. Chief will put the joint wherever 16/0 falls. As others have said here, there is no such way to piece rafters with a bearing line dialog, as there is for floors. There is no way to specify a max length for fascia or subfascia or ridge members, either. They will build at full length and report to the material list in lineal feet.
  14. It is not clear what you want but if you want two rafters either butted at the bearing or lap-joined over, all you have to do is manually frame it.
  15. Consider posting a suggestion to be able to nest polylines and create holes so as to be able to make hollow moldings.
  16. All that CAD work for naught! Bummer. Did you classify the hollows as holes?
  17. Look at your wall definition framing layer. One can choose 16 or 24. If you drew a wall with its framing done with a 24 center, that is what you will get. But why not 24? Most of the time in my area with a 15 degree F winter design temp, I cannot make my ResChecks unless I go to 24. And edit your signature in your profile to show that version of Chief Premier X or whatever you are using, plus what you run it on. It helps us all better sort out your problems.
  18. You can benefit this discussion by completing your sig lines in your account profile, so we know whether you are working in Chief X or Y or whatever, and maybe what you run the software on. And then having done that, you can save and close the file and post it here. If it is too big to post, strip the goodies out of it, leaving just walls and roofs, and it should post just fine. Compress it if you need to. Here is what I get when I build a two story house, second floor with 36" ceiling height, and then roof it.
  19. Find the recent thread "Wall Framing with Scissors Trusses" and read the whole thing. Then re-read it. Take notes about the settings and the moves. Then come back and tell us what you learned.
  20. Determine what that weird angle is, copy its value, then open Default Settings > Plan and check Additional Angles, then paste in your angle. Your section view camera drag can now snap to your angle, no matter how "weird." It ain't weird, it's your lot angle.