2024-05-09 01:05 AM - last edited on 2024-05-09 03:28 AM by Laszlo Nagy
I want a wall mounted handrail, with brackets. 2 hours later, I give up. I am going to do it in SketchUp and import. Pathetic.
A 40mm diameter linear handrail along a wall with 90 degree wall mounted brackets. 200,000,000,000 settings, no idea what they are doing, no result after 2 hours. Each added item results in different materials?
In Archicad, I managed to finally get A railing, with a 150mm overhang (no idea where this is turned off) and floating brackets not connected to the wall. I am not going to embarrass my practice issuing this drawing.
This is not acceptable.
Vectorworks does this in its sleep.
2 minutes in Sketchup, job done. WHY Graphisoft? Please explain.
These simple tasks seem impossible with this incomprehensible clunky railing tool.
I used 3DMD railing tool in the past (I think it's dead now). It worked. It was easy to understand. It was VERY powerful. Why can't ArchiCAd just buy this and develop further? Look at the interface they offer compared to the mess Graphisoft offer.
Why do Archicad insist on pushing this mess onto premium paying customers? Archicad is not cheap.
The stairs tool is also crap. 5,000,000,000 settings but incomprehensible and impossible to get desired results.
I want a simple dog leg winder stairs... impossible without actually getting the calculator out and drafting it first, then tracing the drafting lines.
This is getting tiresome. The energy wasted doing trivial tasks are distracting enormously from the design process, where my energy is now being spent trying to work around limitations rather than innovate.
Operating system used: Mac Apple Silicon
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2024-05-09 03:14 AM - last edited on 2024-05-09 03:30 AM by Laszlo Nagy
You need to use a Handrail to get wall fixings.
Materials, there is a similar dialogue for each component... There is a wish around for this to be consolidated rather than being across a half dozen different dialogues...
Overhangs
AC22-23 AUS 7000 | Help Those Help You - Add a Signature |
Self-taught, bend it till it breaks | Creating a Thread |
Win11 | i9 10850K | 64GB | RX6600 | Win10 | R5 2600 | 16GB | GTX1660 |
2024-05-09 03:14 AM - last edited on 2024-05-09 03:30 AM by Laszlo Nagy
You need to use a Handrail to get wall fixings.
Materials, there is a similar dialogue for each component... There is a wish around for this to be consolidated rather than being across a half dozen different dialogues...
Overhangs
AC22-23 AUS 7000 | Help Those Help You - Add a Signature |
Self-taught, bend it till it breaks | Creating a Thread |
Win11 | i9 10850K | 64GB | RX6600 | Win10 | R5 2600 | 16GB | GTX1660 |
2024-05-09 03:19 AM - edited 2024-05-09 03:19 AM
Hello @CPGQ, you can use the pre made ones already in the library and modify them accordingly. I agree that some things do take quite a bit of time to create and other software may do some things more efficiently. I know that if I used SU to model railing it would take me even longer than in AC. Never tried it in VW but I have seen some videos and the latest fence tool looks good.
2024-05-09 03:32 AM - edited 2024-05-09 04:04 AM
@Lingwisyer wrote:
You need to use a Handrail to get wall fixings.
This is correct.
I have also found that you also need to have the main end posts and the internal post turned on to get those fixings to appear.
That is a bit of a problem when you want to fix to a wall and don't want the posts.
Maybe I am doing something wrong when it comes to this?
You can't set the posts to 'None' as the fixing will not show.
You can't make the post invisible by adjusting the height of width to zero.
You can hide the post in the wall.
My solution was to create a post that is actually not there at all - no 3D.
Object is attached - just add it to your office or embedded library.
Then set the posts to the spacings you want the fixings to appear, and use this 'empty' post.
EDIT: OK ignore this.
I will leave the attached invisible post, but you do not need to do this.
See MitchD's reply.
Barry.
2024-05-09 03:51 AM - last edited on 2024-05-11 01:25 PM by Laszlo Nagy
I think you've got 'distribute by posts' set, the other two options should resolve it.
2024-05-09 04:02 AM
Yes of course, thank you.
I thought it must be possible.
There really are so many options to explore!
Barry.
2024-05-09 05:43 AM
Thinking about post fixings, have they fixed the corner offsets being independant from the inner post spacings yet?
AC22-23 AUS 7000 | Help Those Help You - Add a Signature |
Self-taught, bend it till it breaks | Creating a Thread |
Win11 | i9 10850K | 64GB | RX6600 | Win10 | R5 2600 | 16GB | GTX1660 |
2024-05-09 05:50 AM
I understand where you are coming from that it easy to just model it directly and be done with it but Graphisoft also thought hard how the logic would work in each tool they develop its just a matter of trying to understand all the settings with the railing tool and yes some of them not perfect but still I have encountered most of the things you wrote about and I took time to really explore and see all the settings within the railing tool once you understand it you will find it also useful. 😉
2024-05-09 09:30 AM
The handrail tool, like many other tools in Archicad, has the same problem: modal dialogue windows. This makes it easy for the programmers, but for us users it is hell. CPGQ is therefore absolutely right - how can it be that professional software at this price forces us to waste hours on simple tasks. That's why Sketchup is the tool I use for everything that is even remotely too complex to model in Archicad.
The Morph tool alone is the best example of how not to do it. This tool is practically unusable! I don't know how something like this manages to pass through internal review processes.
2024-05-09 10:20 AM - edited 2024-05-09 10:22 AM
You know that if you are proficient user of SU then it can make good sense to model things in it. Morphing is not as straightforward as SU but it is native to AC so you have to weigh up the pros and cons of learning and using it. I personally do not use SU but have tried a few times but I would rather learn to use the native CAD software first for buildings. Using a software can be like learning a new language and once you can think in that language it becomes much easier to use.