2011-08-04 10:29 PM
2011-08-08 06:32 PM
Peter wrote:While it is very cool what can be done with the shell tool the example shown in the Wiki makes a horizontal return first apparently to hide the fact the it will not make a proper miter with itself as a rake. This technique would still require two profiles.
The Wiki has an article showing one technique that uses the Shell tool -
http://www.archicadwiki.com/GableProfileWithShell
It would be much simpler if GS just allowed you to adjust the end angle of complex profiled beams like you can now with shells!
2011-08-09 12:07 AM
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2011-08-09 12:11 AM
Steven wrote:What I mean by schedules is material list. Do you need to be able to extract the data from your molding in to a schedule showing how many feet of each molding there is? This makes a difference in how things are modeled.Steve wrote:I'm modeling for the elevations, sections, etc. as well as the look in 3D.
Are you modeling for schedules or just for the look of it in 3D ?
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2011-08-09 01:52 AM
Steve wrote:It cannot be done automatically but can be by the method I described. It does require making the matching crown and rake profiles (which is a bit tricky) and the vertical miter has to be cut by SEO (the auto-join fits to the bisector of the axes and cannot do the vertical cut).
What he wants to do ( as I understand it ) can not be done. Those profiles will never match that way. Perhaps I don't get it.
2011-08-09 02:27 AM
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2011-08-09 02:45 AM
Steve wrote:Thats why it requires two molding profiles, with a different rake for each size/type of crown at each roof pitch angle.
It's not a matter of modeling.
Its' a matter of geometry.
Those profiles will not match when mitered at those angles.
2011-08-09 04:26 AM
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2011-08-09 05:31 AM
ArchiCAD 25 7000 USA - Windows 10 Pro 64x - Dell 7720 64 GB 2400MHz ECC - Xeon E3 1535M v6 4.20GHz - (2) 1TB M.2 PCIe Class 50 SSD's - 17.3" UHD IPS (3840x2160) - Nvidia Quadro P5000 16GB GDDR5 - Maxwell Studio/Render 5.2.1.49- Multilight 2 - Adobe Acrobat Pro - ArchiCAD 6 -25
2011-08-09 05:35 AM
2011-08-10 04:50 PM
Matthew wrote:Yes I understand and agree completely.
As others have mentioned the rake is a different profile from the crown and it is not just a simple stretch since vertical to horizontal relationships are affected differently by the rotation and the relative cut angle.
It is not possible in my experience to fake this detail in the field acceptably (I used to be a master carpenter). You need to either find or custom mill proper rake/crown pairs or use a different detail. A common practice is to have the rake die into a horizontal return of the entablature. It's not proper classical order but it looks better than trying to miter parts that don't fit.