DavidJPotter

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Everything posted by DavidJPotter

  1. Whether you use Chief Premier or Home Designer Pro, the hard part will be in Sketch Up, the suggestion by chiefuserrick that you start in AutoCAD (something you are familiar with) and then importing to Sketch Up for converting to a 3D symbol is a GOOD idea, worth trying. Few types of objects are more intricate work than what you want to do ("gingerbread" trim) so creating it in a familiar application is paramount. DJP
  2. Electrical objects have a dialog box that contains an input box label "Distance from Wall", you can use this input box to place and then move away from the wall what you change the input box value to. Whatever you can do in terms of editing or customizing symbols will be contained in its dialog box. DJP
  3. Here is a You Tube video of me creating a box bay window from other tools: https://youtu.be/hvXu4WQ4LjM DJP
  4. Objects made in Sketch Up can be resized a little bit but as you resize such things their shape is also deformed, so one must be very exact in Sketch up before importation. Such intricacy will take a lot of patience on your part and is a LOT of work for such an effect. DJP
  5. Not enough data to helpfully respond, need to know what application and its version number, a picture or image would help or a copy of your plan. DJP
  6. You can download the free version of Sketch Up and use it to make such items for importation into Pro. It is true that Chief Premier does a lot of this by default but you can also learn how to create intricate custom things in Sketch Up. All you need is the intention to succeed. DJP
  7. The box bay window tool is limited in terms of editability. To do what you want, instead of using that tool, manually draw three walls and then manually place windows, this way you can more easily edit the windows to what you need. DJP
  8. What you do is to take an existing siding wall type and pare it down, layer-wise until the wall is only one layer thick (the siding layer) and then you draw your walls next to your posts. That will emulate siding directly connected to your poles, such a wall type, properly set up will then reveal siding on both of its sides. DJP
  9. Dimensions drawn on a Layout would not be at the same scale as the view sent to layout. What you do, is draw or create dimensions in a plan or elevation view and then send that, with dimensions to layout. The layout dimensions are for laying out views on the layout page only. There is no where to point you other than that is the intended purpose of dimensions in a layout. DJP
  10. I cannot speak for "everyone" but would point out that Home Designer 2014 will only do what it was designed to do in terms of Sketch Up imports, whereas, Sketch Up, like Home Designer, has moved on to more modern versions. This is the way of our society and business. If you want to stay with legacy software, then you will have to download earlier versions of Sketch Up files that will import into 2014 (Sketch UP- 3D Warehouse usually offers several file versions for download so you should select the one that works with 2014 and skip the more modern versions by default). Personally, I often have to download several symbols to find one that is actually well made and useful to my purposes. Because something is "free" does not mean that the quality is also present. DJP
  11. Kat, is right in that "Truss Base" does not exist in any Home Designer titles (I took my own advice and did a search in Pro 2015 where I found no mention of "Truss Base" which is a Premier feature only). My apologies for speaking out of turn. DJP
  12. The data you want is in the Reference Manual under the section "Truss Base" where how to create, adjust and use that tool is described. The Reference Manual can be found, read and searched under the "Help" menu. You can also open searchable "Help" and do a search for "Truss base" and find helpful data. DJP
  13. Post a copy of your plan or at least some screen captures to illustrate and communicate better what you currently have. DJP
  14. Here is a You Tube tutorial video about modulating terrain: https://youtu.be/PQQdKKNxk8k DJP
  15. My usual advice, when working with terrain is to make a single change in an elevation value and then check that single change using multiple camera views to evaluate the change. You should want to use as few elevation objects as you can to obtain a particular result. You do this carefully, methodically, one change at a time, checking each change in multiple camera views. This gives you greater control but requires patience. DJP
  16. 3D warehouse items are free, that does not insure quality, just price and often times actual usefulness. Since Chief Architect Inc cannot control how 3d Warehouse stuff is made, I doubt much support will be forthcoming from something they cannot control. My experience with 3D Warehouse is generally good but I download several symbols to find one that I can actually use, is my experience. DJP
  17. DavidJPotter

    Valspar Paints

    What is available for download can be found here: http://3dlibrary.chiefarchitect.com/index.php?r=site/library&search=&x=0&y=0&x=true&soft_family_2=2&hid_soft_family_2=2&utm_source=&utm_medium=&utm_campaign= DJP
  18. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hncV8yl-ND0 This You Tube video may help your understanding. DJP
  19. Here is a You Tube video of me working on your file and what I found: https://youtu.be/OvQNKERyF50 DJP
  20. You can and you should, the whole point of having Pro is so you can manually edit roof planes. It takes some study and practice but is worth the effort. DJP
  21. If you have Home Designer Pro and If the library files are in .alb format (Library files were in that format when I first used 3D Home Architect in 1994), they can be imported/converted using the "Convert Legacy (.alb) Library files" command found under the main toolbar under "Library". I am not sure this command exists in all 2016 titles but it does exist in Home Designer Pro (I looked). DJP
  22. It appears that you merely need to reshape the edges if the full return so that those edges do not poke through the roof edges, just fix it manually. No one promised you a rose garden. DJP
  23. The main limitation built into Home Designer titles is print paper size. The largest Architectural will print to is 18" x 24" which should be fine for most smaller remodeling projects. Home Designer Pro offers even more functionality in terms of roof design and laying out printed plan pages. From what I have read of you, you will quickly outgrow Architectural or Suite and want Pro. DJP