DzinEye

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Posts posted by DzinEye

  1. 3 hours ago, Kbird1 said:

    Chief sure comes up with some weird Defaults ....when is a Cantilever a ceiling ?

    Definitely way waaaay less common than an exterior one.  

     

    3 hours ago, Kbird1 said:

    and why would it be a Zero thickness paint layer ?

    I have to be honest, I was a bit bamboozled by this part of Scott's response.  Like you, at first I thought that he was suggesting that we can add a cantilever material by adding another material to the ceiling finish default... but that doesn't make sense, so I decided that he just means whatever we set for the default ceiling finish is what shows up as the default 'cantilever underside' finish.  

     

    6 hours ago, robdyck said:

    Shouldn't a cantilever material also have a thickness as well? A cantilever is pretty common and should have an automatic function built into Chief.

    Absolutely

  2. 11 hours ago, scottharris said:

    You can set that default in the Ceiling Finish Definition.  In the attached screen shot, it’s using ‘storm’.  Change it here to what you want for the initial material.

    Thank you Scott.  It appears then that there is not a way to have a different default Cantilever Underside material from the rooms ceilling finish material.  Would be nice to have that broken out as a separate default... especially for exteriors.

  3. Don't think you can convert to any kind of wall, but you could Copy/Paste-in-Place the polyline, convert to plain polyline, then reconvert to a molding polyline and give that molding properties that would mimic a garden wall (size, shape, materials).

  4. Chief has one of those in the library (just the roof part) which you might be able to utilize.... otherwise you just create a porch room and use the roof tools.  Search and read about curved roof planes... the settings are in the roof dbx.

  5. What background have you applied to the camera?  Try different ones... but also try different sun intensity settings.
    I've never been able to get a bright background with PBR, but my backgrounds don't show as gray unless I don't have a background selected.

     

    For what it's worth...When I want the background to pop more, I've always resorted to the billboard background method

  6. 2 hours ago, ChiefUserBigRob said:

    So I was sent this as an example someone wants to do on their home. How would you guys tackle the curvature?

     

    image.thumb.png.13dc5cd09f5ec67b3c378ecde664bd9d.png

    In your example (which looks like a digital model) the actual roof planes are barely flared at all.  This look could probably be faked by modeling flared barge rafters that the gutter hides behind.  I'm not a big fan of 'faking' but if this is the example they sent you, it might be enough to make them happy, and much less cost than an actual flared roof.  Having said that, there are much better examples of flared roof eaves, and you might Google it and send them other examples where the flare extends further back into the roof to see if they really want to express that...and absorb the cost.

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  7. 11 hours ago, Designer1 said:

    Does anyone know how to deal with the landing railings not following the regular stair?  No matter what I select on the stair it doesnt look correct.

    Have you tried making the rail manually instead of through the stair dbx ?

  8. Sorry to make an example from your post, but honestly...  I sense you're frustrated, but settle down a second and try to look at your post from the eyes of a reader and potential helper.  How do you expect anyone to help you from what you've posted here? 
    You talk about not being able to do the roof, the ceilings, etc and there's a single picture of one area... and more importantly no plan attached, along with no other information showing what the model needs to look like.  Also, please include your user information so we know what version of Chief you're using and perhaps some info about your computer.
    Try again... 

  9.  The short answer... If you're planning a pretty generic stick-built home, I think Chiefs default settings will get you close enough for basic design purposes.

    Beyond that there's a world of questions that needs answering;  What country, state, city are you designing this for?... Different countries, different parts of a country, different counties and cities all potentially have different requirements.  Within the U.S., they're relatively close but there are differences.  Aside from codes, locally available materials and regional practices may partly dictate 'normal' construction standards in your area.  Codes and Standards aren't the same thing.   You can look up building codes online once you're learned from your building department what codes they follow.  That's a pretty deep-dive though if you just want to 'design' something that you can pass along to other professionals to complete for the building permit and the construction processes.  If your intent is to do all of the above, then you have a long road in front of you.   

  10. Most would probably suggest you only have one building in a plan.  In a separate plan bring in the other building or even both buildings as a symbol(s).  I frequently have more than one building in a plan, but it does get more complicated when they're at different levels, and depending on various modeling complexities, may not be worth trying to do without going to the symbol approach. If you wan to try doing it in one plan, then in the structural panel, you need to adjust everything for one of your buildings in relation to the other building.  So if one of the buildings is supposed to be 24" higher than your primary building, then you need to set it's floor 24" above whatever you have the other floor set at.  Any shown terrain relationship to floor height is only going to be for one of the buildings, you need to manually work it out.

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