LewisConDev

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  1. Two suggestions: 1) Try adjusting the horizontal offset of your beadboard molding. You may have to adjust it in or out to get it to show up properly. I've had to do this for exterior stone when it didn't render initially. 2) If that doesn't work, you can always convert your molding to a polyline. Then you have 100% control over how far in and out it shows, plus you have the full power of polylines behind it so you can have differing depths, hide in areas, etc.
  2. It sounds like you need to talk to your print shop about your orders. Our printer will send plans to us however we ask for them - bound, loose, collated or uncollated, rolled in a tube, I'm sure they'd even throw them on the ground and dance on top if we asked them to (though it might be an extra fee ). They also deliver at no additional cost, which works out great for us when we don't have time to swing by and pick up our plans. If you're not able to work something out, or find a different print shop that's more accommodating, I recommend you talk to a document management company - for example, H & H is one in our area that has been trying to sell equipment to my company for a while, we just don't have the volume. This company and companies like it are specialists in large format plotters and can recommend a device that will work best for your situation based on output, color needs, even units that auto-staple (true story!).
  3. What you are trying to model is known as a Dutch gable or Dutch hip roof. CA have an excellent support article on how to create just such a detail here.
  4. Maybe try faking it with a ceiling plane?
  5. Yeah, I was thinking about how to get fancy and do it in a layout and all that - and then decided just to deal with the situation as it was. I ended up craning my head around to stare at the TV screen as I was designing, so I got a little bit of a neck sore, but it was a great meeting and very productive. Thanks for all the suggestions!
  6. Ultramon also appears to have screwed up my computer's multimonitor display capabilities...
  7. Thanks for the suggestion. Unfortunately, this isn't much better than standard mirroring because I still don't get the "extend desktop with floor plan mirrored" option. I guess I'll just deal with it as is.
  8. Interesting, I've found Windows 10 to be the most stable and well-polished version of Windows I've ever used. Maybe it's your computer - what did you get? [Ctrl-B] to break walls [3] to break lines, [3, 3] to do a complete break I mapped [4] to break lines completely, as well, ever since X8 changed the way it works.
  9. Sounds like you're using OneDrive (oh my god worst sync program ever) or something similar. My recommendation is to map your shared drive to the same letter, so you always have the same path between different computers, if this is possible in your setup. This is easy to do in SharePoint, plus you wouldn't have to deal with OneDrive! For other cloud solutions, I'm sure there are similar capabilities.
  10. You're right, that is an option, however with as much [insert naughty word] is on my screen I much prefer to extend rather than duplicate my display. That way, if I get an email or something that pops up, the client doesn't have to see it as well. EDIT: Not to mention the benefit of being able to work on the floor plan and have the 3D view update in realtime for the client without having to switch my display methods constantly.
  11. Hey guys, have a client meeting in 45 minutes - does anyone know how to create a new windowed view of the standard floor plan, where the same thing updates on two screens at the same time? Similar to what you can do in MS Office and Adobe Acrobat. Thanks!
  12. It was quite the plan - hopefully you and yours can figure out how to build it without going bankrupt! Roofs are definitely a pain in the keister once you move past the simple stuff. If you can figure out how to do general polyline stuff, you should be able to figure out roof planes, and then it's just a matter of drawing them in the right direction and setting the correct height and other settings.
  13. That did it! The deer and the antelope are playing now. It looks like you're going to have to use some combination of changing roof pitches, changing roof styles, and manually modifying roof planes to make sure the roof over the second story doesn't interfere with the walls and windows of the third story. Automatic roofs are a great starting point, but oftentimes, especially with more complex designs like this, you have to go in and make adjustments manually, or all-out redraw it yourself.
  14. I'm getting an error when trying to open your plan file (happened in both X7 and X8). Probably needs more deer and antelope.
  15. Correct, the problem arose because I used the wrong scaling method to rescale those views. I ended up copying the views from an archived version of the layout file and re-scaled them properly so I didn't have to try to redo all my sizing. However, that doesn't mean this isn't a bug - there shouldn't be a circumstance where I do something "wrong" and can never recover from it, such as transform-scaling a layout view instead of changing the scale properly. I'm guessing nobody has found a way to correct this if it does happen then?