2009-10-20 04:43 PM
2009-10-30 10:28 PM
NStocks wrote:OK, I've attached some images showing a better quality result, i.e. one that might actually work. I've constructed each segment out of two parts - a part that bends to the curve and a separate flat part where the segments are riveted together. I've bent the profile to a radius of 10,000mm and made each segment 100mm thick. If every segment is to fold cleanly over the previous, the radius will have to increase by 100mm. So I start with the profile of the smallest segment and progressively increase the profile length by 100mm at either end:
No, he was referring to the current version of AutoCAD and ArchiCAD. He said that AutoCAD has ' required ' 3DS and a few other programs and just labelled it Autodesk... Not to be a ' Mac fan ' but you can quite simply tell that AutoCAD was made to work on a PC, by the layout of the toolbars etc. I think that he only recommends AutoCAD because at least 90% of the students will have Windows' PC's ( 4 of my group have Mac's and are using Bootcamp, Windows 7 and AutoCAD as well as sketchp, but that's because they are influenced by what the tutor has said, in the lecture to 170 students, that is ) and the University have PC's of which they can run AutoCAD for free and use the latest version each year.
Attached is a 5 minute preview of what it will look like in Sketchup, I think that it will look o.k, but it won't have that certain quality that ArchiCAd offers, and I'm not to keen on the section cuts and not sure if it has elevation settings.
How long would it take you to create my model to a ' perfect ' quality ? I'm not asking you to send me the version ( though screenshots would be helpful ) nor asking you to spend your time creating it, I just want an idea of how long a professional can do it.
2009-10-30 10:37 PM
2009-10-30 10:45 PM
NStocks wrote:You can also make the connecting rivet using OBJECTiVE's lathed profiles - just draw a half section through the profile with the polyline tool (see image) and use
Thank you very very much ! That's more like the profile I used to make a cardboard model from.
2009-10-30 11:16 PM
NStocks wrote:It seems to me that there would be every advantage in moving to ArchiCAD. Consider the facts:
He said that AutoCAD has ' required ' 3DS and a few other programs and just labelled it Autodesk... Not to be a ' Mac fan ' but you can quite simply tell that AutoCAD was made to work on a PC, by the layout of the toolbars etc. I think that he only recommends AutoCAD because at least 90% of the students will have Windows' PC's ( 4 of my group have Mac's and are using Bootcamp, Windows 7 and AutoCAD as well as sketchp, but that's because they are influenced by what the tutor has said, in the lecture to 170 students, that is ) and the University have PC's of which they can run AutoCAD for free and use the latest version each year.
2009-10-30 11:22 PM
Ralph wrote:I know, I though that AutoCAD was too far behind, at least for 3D and I think that because the University can get the next years version ( were running 2010) they think it's an update, well it is, but in reality nothing has changed. My personal Tutor said that AutoCAD is good for 2D but it's not as good for 3D as ArchiCAD is, I tried drawing something in 3D AutoCAD and it required more stages to accomplish it, not to mention the fact that you need to keep changing ' tabs' at the top to get to different tool sets ( similar to Microsoft Office 2007, PC version ). She has/does also use Microstation if you've heard of it, but I couldn't really find a ' solid ' website to download it.NStocks wrote:It seems to me that there would be every advantage in moving to ArchiCAD. Consider the facts:
He said that AutoCAD has ' required ' 3DS and a few other programs and just labelled it Autodesk... Not to be a ' Mac fan ' but you can quite simply tell that AutoCAD was made to work on a PC, by the layout of the toolbars etc. I think that he only recommends AutoCAD because at least 90% of the students will have Windows' PC's ( 4 of my group have Mac's and are using Bootcamp, Windows 7 and AutoCAD as well as sketchp, but that's because they are influenced by what the tutor has said, in the lecture to 170 students, that is ) and the University have PC's of which they can run AutoCAD for free and use the latest version each year.
- AutoCAD
- Works for 90% of your computers (PC only)
- Free to the university
- The dinosaur of architectural design softwareAlthough AutoCAD is probably still used in many practices, it's primarily due to the same inertia (or budget constraints) that kept architects working on the drawing board. I can't think of a single redeeming feature of the software otherwise. It seems a pity to be learning outdated practices at university.
- ArchiCAD
- Works for 100% of your computers (Mac and PC)
- Free to the university
- Contemporary BIM software
2009-10-30 11:39 PM
NStocks wrote:ArchiCAD is free to educational users - that sounds pretty good for the budget. I can't really comment on what most people would want to use, but then I'm not really interested either. If you want to be the best, pick the best tool for the job. Graphisoft is an innovative company and ArchiCAD is 100% dedicated to architecture. Autodesk is not a company I associate with innovation, and they spread themselves too thin by trying to be everything to everyone. Although Revit (Autodesk's BIM product) is gaining ground on ArchiCAD, it's still significantly behind IMO. The latest teamwork in ArchiCAD 13 has really propelled ArchiCAD forward too.
I think it's soley based on budget and because most people will want to use the largest growing piece of software ( apparantley ). AutoCAD also has BIM doesn't it ?
2009-10-30 11:44 PM
Ralph wrote:Do you know if I would be able to upgrade to ArchiCAD 12 ? I'm on a educational licence ? I'm not even going to think about moving over to AutoCAD, I prefer ArchiCAD and would rather spend my time learning about that. If there's something I can't do in ArchiCAD I will use sketchup since I know how to use that now. I really don't understand why were using AutoCAD though, it's causing problems for Mac users ! ( well not me )NStocks wrote:ArchiCAD is free to educational users - that sounds pretty good for the budget. I can't really comment on what most people would want to use, but then I'm not really interested either. If you want to be the best, pick the best tool for the job. Graphisoft is an innovative company and ArchiCAD is 100% dedicated to architecture. Autodesk is not a company I associate with innovation, and they spread themselves too thin by trying to be everything to everyone. Although Revit (Autodesk's BIM product) is gaining ground on ArchiCAD, it's still significantly behind IMO. The latest teamwork in ArchiCAD 13 has really propelled ArchiCAD forward too.
I think it's soley based on budget and because most people will want to use the largest growing piece of software ( apparantley ). AutoCAD also has BIM doesn't it ?
2009-11-01 02:02 PM
2009-11-01 07:54 PM
NStocks wrote:I finished the profile curves at a tangent to a line perpendicular to the end, so when the end is offset it remains the same width (see image). You will need to add an extra vertex for the first offset though, otherwise you'll get an extension of the adjacent curve.
When I offset the edge by 100mm, how do I do it so that it just makes the profile longer, rather than wider and longer ?
2009-11-01 08:14 PM
Ralph wrote:So should I just add the end pieces ( rounded-edged with the joining hole ) separately by:NStocks wrote:I finished the profile curves at a tangent to a line perpendicular to the end, so when the end is offset it remains the same width (see image). You will need to add an extra vertex for the first offset though, otherwise you'll get an extension of the adjacent curve.
When I offset the edge by 100mm, how do I do it so that it just makes the profile longer, rather than wider and longer ?