jtcapa1

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Posts posted by jtcapa1

  1. 12 hours ago, Chopsaw said:

    Try adjusting the room height.  Hopefully there are no others issues that will be created by doing that. ;)

     

    image.thumb.png.f9dbcb8954a5a87ddabb616500173a40.png

    Thanks Chopsaw!  I was working till 10pm yesterday due to the heat outside, and my brain was not working right!  So that was a blonde moment.

    Thankfully you saw the simple and obvious solution.  I owe you a coffee!

  2. I have a client with a specific cabinet they want in their nook and I thought I could draft it easy enough with the door hardware, but quickly found that CA seems to have a limit to how cabinet door handles are located.  It seems to be global to the specific cabinet, so even though I can have a top or bottom hinge cabinet door, or two banks of double doors, the handle locator is off.

    I've had this issue for years with pantry cabinets when I want the handles close to each other, but this is the first time I've tried a combo unit with two different style of doors.  The main issue is that CA does not want to display the handle for the top hinged door at the top or bottom but defaults to the side??

     

     

    door handle issue.jpg

  3. I'm hoping to get some help in puzzling out if I should upgrade my existing system, or cash out my IRA to buy a top of the line system?

    Real world RT time test would be very helpful for us.

    The only way I can think to do this is by rendering a file that has some preset lighting and have everyone with a GPU capable system render the same camera setting for a specific number of passes.

    Just turn all all the lights and see how long it takes to do 10 passes.

     

  4. Does it matter for the graphic rendering in X13 if the CPU is a Razen versus an Intel i7?  Most of the specs tout the Razen as blowing the intel cpu's out of the water for graphic renderings, but I got confused in that AMD cpu's don't have a built in graphic card.  Right now, I've got a 1080Ti GTX card that won't RT any faster than X12 because it must use the CPU to do RT'ing.

     

    So as I look to update my rig, I'm wondering if I'm better served in RT scenes (I do a lot of very complex interiors) if I went with a complete AMD chip set and CPU with a 3060 RTX instead of intel.

     

    Any thoughts or comments or comparisons?

  5. Looks like the technology is improving and dropping in price.  I've just watched a Dot3d presentation for doing indoor scanning using existing mobile devices. BUT it does not look like CA yet supports importing these files like ACAD can.  Is that a feature CA will be supporting soon?

    6 Bedroom House - 3D Scanned with Dot3D™ Pro & Intel® RealSense™ D455 (dotproduct3d.com)

     

    Ideally, if CA could import the native *.dp format, these files are small! E57 format is the next best.

     

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  6. I've asked CA to correct this before.  I think you need to post that ask in the suggestions forum and get it on their short list.  There are many issues with the tails as they extend past the walls and join up with fascia, subfascia and soffits.

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  7. Well I guess we did not rate highly enough with CA for the "private invite".

    Public beta testing is mostly in name only while they work out the final bugs before release.

  8. As long as you can import the detail and then make those changes, it would save time.  This assumes some level of knowledge of your own market.  You cannot be concerned about what the less experienced user might do with them.   I do love the 3d cut-aways, as I've been putting 3d framing perspectives on my construction documents for years now.

     

    What I love about CA is that I can basically put every single stick of framing in any project, manipulate them, colorize them and then create a great 3d framing perspective like this:

    My structural engineer now has to spend less time load tracing, since I've not only done it, I've made it easy to see.  I even upload these 3d models to the CA cloud viewer so the engineers can see it in detail.   I honestly spend way too much time completing these 3d models, by including all those great 3d Simpson hangers and fasteners.

    3dFraming_Rear1.jpg

  9. I like the ease at which this can be done for sure.  We already take copious photographs of the existing home, so this is a small step in a slightly different direction.  I like the "augmenting" the flow by taking some critical measurements, so that the 3d scan becomes more accurate.  Just a couple of quick X,Y & Z measurements of some of the rooms could get the accuracy much closer.  But right now you've got a disconnect that could easily be overcome:

    Quote

    In order to help you get a model that includes these tight tolerances, you can submit a drawing or diagram with any manually verified dimensions with your Scan To CAD order. Then, we will override the existing values for those dimensions with the measurements you provide and use the scan to process everything else.

    I've seen other recent software measuring tools that incorporate inputting on the fly measurements while you take those Lidar images.  See the new Houzz Pro 3d App

    That would put those critical measurements into the scan, saving time and money on your end.

     

    Question:  Is there another device one could buy that is not an iPad or iPhone?  Some kind of handheld Lidar attachment?

  10. That is why we come here to pick the brains of all these experts that have been making CA do what it was never designed to do, since it was first created.

    I love and hate 3d CAD; in that I love the visual end results but hate the amount of time I spend monkeying around with it. Or as Glenn might say:

    "it was a dog's guts of a problem, brought in by a chap that's Few roos loose in the top paddock, but with a little encouragement and a zoom lesson, he'd have a go, ya mug, who in the end was a fair dinkem Shark biscuit, and went straight to the pool room"

     

    So in the end Glenn helped me suss it out, and he's a top bloke in my book. 

    :-) 

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  11. Just now, solver said:

     

    Wonder if you could draw your own newel and block with the tread so they are correctly positioned as the treads are moved up and around?

    Sure. I've played with that and you can if you want to spend more time. It is a fun exercise in geometry to get everything lined up.

  12. Thanks Glen,

     

    I struggled with CA and could not get what you did.  Any chance you can either do a quick video of the steps you took? Or at least a description? Maybe a Zoom call.

    I could not get a smooth rail, nor glass.

    I've got some banana's :D

    I had to grab a model off of the sketchup warehouse to do this, but it is limited to the model created.

     

    spiralStair3d.jpg

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  13. Your welcome Perry.  I have always included as much 3d information as possible on my permit documents for the benefit of the Contractors and subs.  I've actually had one building official ask me to take it off because it confused her?!*  I know it is not to any kind of AIA standard but in this brave new digital world it is just another small step in the direction of clarity of intent and purpose.  I spend so much time making accurate 3d model's it is a shame not to show. Now we can also distinguish between existing and new!  Love it.

  14. On ‎9‎/‎14‎/‎2018 at 10:31 AM, Doug_N said:

     

    John, Thanks for posting that great video.  Very well done.

    Thanks Doug,  I finally got serious about making video tutorials for CA as a very fast and informative way to show what I'm trying say with words. A picture might be worth a thousand words, but a video is worth much more. :-)

     

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  15. I hate to admit this but I tend to do way too many project specific detailed sections cuts.  I do have about 30 basic details that I can reuse, but on most of my remodel projects I just use CA to draw a section, and if I've taken the time to make a near perfect 3d model I use the live image to draft a 2d looking detail, so it is updated when the plan changes. I'll fill it with custom boxes with different fills as needed and populate it with the text needed to explain everything.   I prefer custom details over the canned ones and so does every contractor that builds from my plans.  Rarely have any questions or problems in the field.

     

    It just takes a lot longer to complete a set of plans as each one is very customized.

  16. I avoided all the surgeries until my "floaters" got so bad that the (3)27" bright white Samsung LCD's were driving me crazy wiping my eyes constantly to try and get rid of something that was not on my eyeball but inside.  The bright white screens made it so bad I had to tilt my head and shift it constantly to view around the floating halo inside my eyeball.  My main eye doctor just said you have to learn to live with it.  I tried for two years, but this floater was almost dead center in my right eye. Imagine swatting at flies in front of your computer monitor all day long!

     

    I did not give up and finally found the ONE local doctor that was doing the new YAG laser treatment for floaters.  I took 3 visits and about 5000 laser zaps, but he finally got rid of 90% of the Floater giving me grief!

     

    Now I want to get a 60" 4k curved monitor, and work from about 4' away.  I saw this setup at my local granite cutting company and ended up with Monitor envy!