KirkClemons

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Posts posted by KirkClemons

  1. We are seeing this a lot when people have their templates stored in the OneDrive folder.

    There has been a new update that turns on OneDrive's "Files on demand" feature by default.

     

    This means that the files appear on your computer, but they are actually in the cloud (denoted by a cloud symbol in file explorer).

     

    I recommend either moving the Home Designer Pro 2018 Data folder to the standard location of "C:\Users\trueb\Documents", or disabling the "Files on demand" feature in OneDrive's settings.

    https://support.office.com/en-us/article/Learn-about-OneDrive-Files-On-Demand-0E6860D3-D9F3-4971-B321-7092438FB38E

  2. DPI is only important when printing. But, you will never see a difference when viewing the image on a screen because the screen will only show you what it is physically capable of showing.

     

    So the image's pixel dimensions are what is important for viewing on a screen. So, to solve your problems we need to figure out why the program is not accepting any values above a certain amount.

     

    I'll do a little research to see if there is a way for me to reproduce this behavior.

  3. Well, the sharpness/blurriness is tied to the image resolution. So, it's curious that you are unable to export to the size you want. I've never seen it restrict image sizes before.

  4. Are you checking or unchecking any of the boxes in the dialog? That can try to do some auto-corrections and mess it up.

     

    What aren't you happy with, in the scene, specifically?

  5. The first change I would recommend is bumping the image size from 4K to 8K.

    Meaning, your current export was exported at 4096x2048 pixels. Bump this up to 8192x4096 pixels and see how that looks to you.

     

    Otherwise, it looks fine, I'm not seeing any obvious issues.

  6. PDF's are generally printed at a specific scale, as you indicated, the document you have is at 3/16" scale.

    When you are drawing in Floor Plan view, you are actually drawing at a 1:1 (1" = 1") scale as David pointed out.

     

    So, to make the imported document work for tracing over it, you need to scale it up from 3/16" scale to 1:1 scale. Take a look at the Knowledgebase article that David linked to.

    It contains the steps for scaling an imported image/PDF file up to 1:1 scale so that you can trace it more accurately. It's never going to be a perfect scale, but it should be close enough for you to get the drawing put together and then fine tune it.

  7. I would recommend attaching a copy of your plan with your latest attempts at drawing the retaining walls and terrain data.

    With Terrain issues/questions, it's generally an exercise in simplifying the terrain data so that it is as accurate as possible while not being so complex that it looks bad.

  8. I think it's because you are looking at Sherwin Williams and Behr product lines. These are not generic yellows, they are custom shades pulled from each manufacturers catalog.

    Compare those to the Yellows found in the Home Designer Core Catalog and you'll see the difference.

    behr.jpg

    core-generic.jpg

    sherwin.jpg

  9. I would recommend using the Reference Floor Display to see an outline of the floor above/below the one you are working on. Then you can use the dimension tools to set the exact offset that you want. Example attached.

     

    These help resources specifically talk about using the reference floor display:

     

    This is a bit easier to do in Chief Architect Premier because you can dimension to the reference floor display without needing to draw reference lines.

    cantilever.zip

  10. Another important distinction;

    The Chief Architect 3D Viewer mobile app is not the same as the online Chief Architect 360° Panorama Viewer.

     

    The Chief Architect 3D Viewer, allows you to export a 3D model from one of the desktop applications to the cloud, then download it to the 3D viewer mobile app. However, there is also a web-based version that can be shared via a direct link or embedded on a website but will not work in most mobile browsers.

    https://chiefarchitect.com/3DV

     

     

     

    The Chief Architect 360° Panorama Viewer, is a web-based viewer that can be accessed only in a web browser and it only views panoramic images not 3D models. There is no installed app for this product:

    https://chiefarchitect.com/360

  11. The program does not automatically position the terrain perimeter.

     

    And yes, as I mentioned before, you must place waypoints and import them as elevation data if you want elevation data from the GPX file.

    Otherwise, if you have imported the terrain perimeter you can manually place elevation data using the methods you learned about in our online training resources:

    https://www.homedesignersoftware.com/videos/watch/2264/terrain-elevation-data.html?playlist=200

  12. Hello P15-D24,

    Yes, you are correct in assuming that you need a plan file to import the terrain into.

     

    But you only need an existing terrain perimeter to see the data, if you don't have any track points.

     

    If you have Track points, in your file, then you want to import those as 'Terrain Perimeter'. These would normally outline a path, so be sure they outline the perimeter of your lot.

    Waypoints should be imported as 'Elevation Data'. These define the actual elevation of a specific point.

     

    Once these are imported into the plan, move your terrain perimeter to encompass them,(if you didn't use any track points) and your 3D view should update with the new information.

  13. Some of this could be done in Suite, but most of the sloping beams, and truss members could not be drawn using Suite.

    You would need to either make the roof beams in another program and import them in, then hope they are the right scale, or use Home Designer Pro to gain control over manual framing tools.

  14. Yea, I know where the zoom buttons are, but that's not what I'm talking about.

    I mean the overall size. Like how big it is when you zoom all the way out.

    The overall size is huge.  Like hundreds of feet in each direction.

    Can't I limit the size to say 10 by 20 feet so if I zoom all the way out all I see it the room, not the universe!

     

    Roger

    Sounds like you've drawn your walls too long. The way you limit the size of your project is to draw the walls roughly the lengths you need to begin with. You should have temporary dimensions as you draw, displaying the length of the wall that you are drawing. If you are already zoomed out too far to see these then zoom in really quick and try drawing the wall again.

     

    The house design tutorial can help you with the process of creating a drawing in the software that is the right size. You can access this by selecting 'Help> View User's Guide' from your menu.