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Abacus

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  • Occupation
    Design/Draft/Build
  • Location
    Salem, Oregon, USA
  1. Exporting drawing PDFs to iPhoto works fine for viewing and should work as a stopgap measure for the iPad. Each job is a separate album with the plan sheets being the photos of that album. Works great right now on the mac as a quick way to show clients past projects.
  2. Abacus

    Door tool

    dcont, Thanks for your help! That works. I was sure I had already tried that along with every other possible combination of settings but obviously not. I so wanted to blame the program. Now I have shame :whistle: Thanks
  3. Abacus

    Door tool

    dcont, That is the problem. The door wall lines do not change regardless of the changes I make to Ceiling-Main attributes. "Use at Creation" is checked. I use a dashed line for Ceiling-Main but the door wall line shows solid. This was not the case in 12.0.1. Thanks
  4. Abacus

    Door tool

    After upgrading to 12.5.1 from 12.0.1, wall (header) lines of doors do not take on the "Ceiling-Main" attributes except for visibility settings. In old files opened with 12.5.1 show the wall lines correctly until a change is made to the door. I assume there is a setting I am unaware of and hope someone can help me out. My temporary and maybe permanent fix was to replace the 12.5.1 "Door.vso" with the 12.0.1 "Door-vso".
  5. Petri, Sorry to see you go, I'll miss your words of wisdom, your tact, and your thoughtfulness. Hopefully someone can fill the inevitable void. Have a diplomatic day
  6. Terra, The Apple iMacs are a great value. If you need portability, the Apple MacBook Pros are great machines. I have owned many Apple computers over the years and have had no major issues (hardware or operating system) with any of them. Large format printing can generally be handled by your local print shop via PDF, sparing you the cost and headache of a large printer. Good luck with your new business. I wish you much success. Go Beavs (just had to do that)
  7. Gary, Making the lower walls taller, as suggested by Peter, does not affect the door and window heights. Their elevation is relative to the wall base. Another option where walls are stacked is to use one wall for all stories. This works but does have some drawbacks and kind of defeats layering.
  8. George, Nice armoire! Newbie, I have to agree with Islandmon: "That desk job looks to be an excellent candidate for the good ol' Table Saw, Router ... and cordless screw gun ; ) " The CNC overhead alone could exceed the time required using the good ol' method, unless you contract out the CNC portion to a qualified cabinet maker. Building and joining the base components before making the desk top eliminates the need to estimate and apply tolerances. Just fit to resulting size.
  9. Abacus

    StoneCAD

    Nicholas, I have used the ledgestone hatch on one project and did not notice any speed decrease after importing and using it. I did a test on a new document and the ledgestone hatch added 12 KB. Simple hatches add about 4 KB. Very acceptable for the hatch quality and cost.
  10. Abacus

    StoneCAD

    Darrell, Thanks for the tip. StoneCAD has one seriously screwed up interface but the hatches it produced are great.
  11. Christiaan, Try it using Arcs instead of circles. The fillet tool does the trimming. ? Arc by radius, make approx. 300 degree sweep ? Duplicate/Mirror (openings in arcs face each other) ? Adjust radius in second arc. ? Fillet w/ trim (touch arc ends)
  12. Dimension that are on a design layer do show up in isometric views in viewports. It does take some experimenting to make them presentable.
  13. Anthony, The valley angle can be defined and drawn by the rise of roof 1 over the rise of roof 2. Per your first illustration the valley angle (ratio) is a 10/6. Example to form valley of 10/12 and 6/12 roof: Draw a line 10 units horizontally. From right end of that line, draw a second line 6 units vertical (up). Draw a third line connecting the ends of the first 2 lines (the hypotenuse). That is the left valley. Sorry for the long winded explanation. Actually much easier just double clicking on line tool and entering values for X and Y.
  14. David, I think Alan and cbaarch replies are on the mark. There are many ways to produce the same results. Trying to make VWs perform as AC is to ignore VWs strengths and versatility. Focusing on lines in VWs or AC to produce drawings is to underutilize both programs capabilities. And yet another method to perform the "drawing exercise" - Double click on Snap to Grid tool - Set to symmetrical 1" snap grid/show grid lines - With line tool, draw lines with mouse. No keyboard input needed.
  15. AJ, The little red squares indicate associative dimensioning. If you make changes to the object size/position, the associated dimension also changes. The red square indicates the dimension/object connection point. It does not print. You can turn associative dimensioning off under menu File: Document settings: Document Preferences. Gene
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