DavidJPotter

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Everything posted by DavidJPotter

  1. Currently, the oldest version of Home Designer Pro I have is the current version (2018) but never the less, yours should be essentially just like my copy, in regards to line weights. Even your older version comes with a Reference Manual. If you were to open it and search for the subject of "Line Weights" you would discover that lines weights can be edited per payer in your "Layer Display Options" dialog for the plan view Layer Display Options dialog. There is a column called "Line Weights" that you can increase of decrease the line weight value for any given layer in the Plan View Layer Dialog. For a visual check, they have provided a "Show Line Weight" tool and icon for visually displaying line weights so you can evaluate the relative lightness and darkness of said line weights on screen. This also is explained in detail in your Reference Manual and Help files, which should be your first destination when you become curious about how something is done or how something works in this software. DJP
  2. Eric meant and what is real is that the size of the virtual model in the software is at "Real World Scale" (1' = 1'). Of course when you send a view to a layout so it will print on a page of paper, it must be scaled down from "real world" scale to a scale that will fit on the intended paper. That can be done in any Home Designer or Chief Architect software. I believe you want to simply downsize the square footage of your structure (not really scale it down but just make it smaller), that can be done by moving the walls to a smaller dimension as Eric indicated (THAT IS WHAT HE MEANT). So you are NOT SCALING down the plan but merely resizing it (scaling is not actually what I believe you meant to originally communicate). Scaling can mean "to make smaller so as to fit on a smaller graphic communication media, what I believe you meant is to make the square footage of the structure smaller. Verbal communication is often a source of confusion. No Architectural software on Earth that I know of can scale an entire structure down, concentrically as you seem to want to do and if you think about it in detail you would not even want to do such a thing as appliances, furniture and fixtures are not capable of being concentrically resized either, virtual or real. DJP
  3. You import the two photos as custom backdrops and then switch backdrops per camera view. DJP
  4. There is no such application called "Suite Pro", there is Home Designer Suite and separately there is Home Designer Pro. The attached image I did in Home Designer Pro 2018 DJP
  5. DavidJPotter

    Dormer depth

    If that does not work, you may have to "Explode" the dormer object into its parts (walls, roof planes, window and hole in the roof poly-line) and then manually align the dormer till its ridge matches the main house ridge (a unified dormer object, unexploded cannot do this action because its hole in the roof cannot touch or go over the main roof's main ridgeline), that is the way dormer objects are programmed to work (or not work in your case). You then delete the dormers hole in the roof polyline and manually adjust the roof edges. It is a bit of work but sometimes the auto tools do not work in all cases causing you to have to manually step in. DJP
  6. What you want to do cannot easily be done in Interiors. It can be done in Chief Architect Premier and Home Designer Pro but in either application, it is a rather tedious process, which can be learned and done IF you are intent on doing so, DJP
  7. That feature exists in Chief Premier X9 and X10 (Niche tool), as well as Home Designer Pro 2018 and Architectural 2018 but not what you currently have. DJP
  8. I agree with Allyn. It may be your PC or Mac does not meet "Minimum Requirements" to support the running of Home Designer software OR something else an educated Tech Support person would be familiar with to your benefit. DJP
  9. Roof planes are programmed to cut off walls that are under the plane of the roof planes. So like Eric said, edit the edges of the roof planes in the area of the chimney walls, so they are not interrupted by roof plane edges. DJP
  10. By "Icon Bar" do you mean TOOLBAR? If so you do not need to reinstall, rather just watch this video and do what is indicated: DJP
  11. I have been using Chief Premier and Home Designer software since 1995 and I have never heard of any such ".pro" files or what they might be significant to, sorry. As Eric said, please supply more explanatory data so we can then possible help you. DJP
  12. Like Eric said, just rebuild the roof planes, your design is not a difficult one to auto-produce provided your wall specification dialog - Roof Tab settings are correctly set up. DJP
  13. I would not even attempt to do what you intend in Architectural. You will have to copy-paste each floor of each structure and then precisely align them, one to another. Then, even with Pro or Chief if your terrain plan is something other than flat, you will then have to adjust each building to the terrain as it changes height. It is very exacting work however you decide to do it. I have done multi-structure projects before so I know what I am talking about. Upgrade to Pro and even then be very careful and operate with plan copies so if you make an error, you have something to fall back on and start again. DJP
  14. Doing what you want to do only in Architectural would drive me batty. You are better off in this case upgrading to Home Designer Pro to finish your project. Pro has "Edit-Edit Area All Floors" like you need. Architectural does not. Pay the extra money and do yourself a big favor! Your .plan file will open and edit in Pro so no time will be lost. DJP
  15. Be sure that your parapet wall is the same wall type as other exterior walls. That being the case, they then should line up, floor to floor. DJP
  16. I know many users who are remodeling contractors that use Pro. I use mainly Chief Premier as I am a professional designer and draftsperson but I do work with many Pro users who are mostly remodelers. Pro exports only in .dxf 2D format (not .dwg), as Chief Premier does. DJP
  17. Every object in this software has a dialog box, that is the basic way you edit anything in this software, take a look. DJP
  18. Here is my attempt to help you: I am not at all sure if the sound is working in this, if not, I did try. I think Eric understood better what you need than I did. DJP
  19. Welcome to the forum. Respectfully, you should just start a new forum origination or thread as opposed to tagging your question on to this already existing thread. It is not a big deal but is just better form. I suggest that you create your plans in Home Designer, then print them out to share with Professional contractors, Structural Engineers that can advise you on getting your project properly built. Home Designer is basically a communication aid to get your intentions and desires understood by others, so get started! DJP
  20. 3D Printing was added as a feature only last year, in only Chief Premier. Only a tiny percentage of Premier users have reported results using Chief Premier. New things take awhile to catch on. I do not know the acceptable file formats that 3D Printers require (none of my clients are interested in having such things, so for me, my use of Chief Premier and Home Designer is purely for monetary gain, not a hobby) but you can find that out by reading your users manual for your printer and so find out. Then you can look at what Home Designer will currently "Export" from its "File- Export" menu and thus answer your own question for now. I doubt anyone here knows positively unless this thread is read by someone at Chief Inc Sales. You can also just call Chief Architect - Home Designer Tech Support or Sales and just ask them. DJP
  21. I am Beta Testing Chief Architect X10 (Version 20) and a client asked me to create a conceptual layout and model for building a custom home for a property he just bought. We had a quick on line meeting, he sent me some conceptual photos of houses in the area of his property. So I put this together for him, emailed the link and a PDF of the layout, this is the result, all in just two hours! You guys are going to love the new Home Designer versions that come from the development of the new Chief Premier:(click on the link to view the 3D model please) https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2F3d-viewer.chiefarchitect.com%2Fgo%3Fshare%3D144051735589548&h=ATPkfAnDEKZan6P5MJIZazcKjvCPc6pEStUDjBXs2ZdnkX_EoPiOCV1HvadNvql9JxQ5Kaq3jptoIGkbqqQTq8TTC5W80Pr7El2tunVDD6bC2PVvbAPqceVK0RlFqRDZIpYPoycAlSqAyx1ZsN-pWf8y3-cjbbXIOtsxpDaqGWXcuLJH7xXZULylXeZJEYMMUYObjCN5T_pBCCYdHQEyCnUK__jBA7Jhl-fIN3bYMsrzkGE2vpcps4nilOTmCd3Oj6I1fex2AeGQ3p05J8yGvYulZwPNXyBsJ2ACAwjW6BvFk5LCpucJ-veilpUZixB4OA
  22. This is a matter of symmetry in that if you want symmetry, the baselines of the roofs must line up from one end of the house to the other, easy if you think of it in terms of simple geometry. DJP
  23. No software in the Universe draws or creates anything, rather it is you who is the only important factor in terms of outcomes, not what software you use. In capable, certain hands, this software can assist you to the goal of a digital, relationally correct copy of your home AFTER you have self-disciplined yourself to learn how to use it and its tools. Best of success~ DJP