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series of vertical grooves in the wall

  • Thread starter Thread starter blue.cat
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blue.cat

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Hello everyone, I press that following this post:
http://www.cad3d.it/forum1/showthread.php?t=6733&highlight=scanalatureI couldn't solve the problem, so I ask you to apologize if I create a post of study.
I have to recreate a wall with outer cladding of wooden strips 5x5 cm and spaced between them 5 cm, to do this I wanted to use the groove command (after having added in the stratigraphy of the wall in question an external layer of 6 cm of wood).
as indicated in the previous post I consulted I created a new channel profile through a new family, I dissected the properties of the wall > change structure, but the underlying button "scanalature" is activated only if they select in "preview" the vertical section (if I try selecting the "floor plan", that is to say the horizontal section of the wall, the keys remain all disabled). doing this, when I select the profile I created, a horizontal, not vertical groove is created.
also to carry out a series of grooves (i.e. along the whole wall) do I have to give an "offset" in the selection properties of the groove?
thank you very much for the advice and apologize again the repetition.
 
I'm home today, and I can't control it. But I have doubts about the vertical, personally I have never made of it, I am doubtful that you can do.... I do not remember.

if no one more expert than me forgets you could create a wall-based parametric family consisting of a single beam and copy it in series, blocking eq or just a whole family where you parameterize the number of beams and the distance between them.

of ways to reach the result in minimum revit you will find 10

or as the good tristan says the facade continues (it preceded me on time)
 
Why not use a continuous facade? ?
Basically because I'm a revit mole and I'm ignorant about it! :) I started with the idea of solving the thing in rendering, then I discovered the impossibility of using bump in revit and having already created the wall in question I thought of solving it in this way, but most likely it is not the ideal solution! I'm going to add to the subject.
however just for curiosity, how could you solve the problem in question? Did I miss anything in the process?
Anyway thank you, I'll try to do as you told me!
 
Don't worry I think I'm a neophile too and I'm trusted, but the more time passes and the more I go against that for many things in revit is worth the "said where revit doesn't arrive there you throw the hat you"
 
I'm home today, and I can't control it. But I have doubts about the vertical, personally I have never made of it, I am doubtful that you can do.... I do not remember.

if no one more expert than me forgets you could create a wall-based parametric family consisting of a single beam and copy it in series, blocking eq or just a whole family where you parameterize the number of beams and the distance between them.

of ways to reach the result in minimum revit you will find 10

or as the good tristan says the facade continues (it preceded me on time)
I imagined that there were more chances of solving the question, for now I will try with the continuous facades (or better, I will "discover" the continuous facades), in case I will also try this way.
Council grazes!
 
for charity let it go was the first thing that came to mind as a neophylae... Trusted Tristan I had not thought about it so on two feet.... Don't complicate your life.

with the continuous facade you put 1 minute, remember to create the facade profile 5x5 before
 
Excuse the question, but I should place a continuous facade on the outside side of my wall after "removing" the superfluous layer, right?
 
I'm home today, and I can't control it. But I have doubts about the vertical, personally I have never made of it, I am doubtful that you can do.... I do not remember.
Yes, you can. when you launch the "wall clearing" command, on the tape context card there are 2 buttons, horizontal and vertical precisely.
I started with the idea of solving the thing in rendering, then I discovered the impossibility to use bump in revit...
this is not exact; in revit you can apply materials with bump map
Excuse the question, but I should place a continuous facade on the outside side of my wall after "removing" the superfluous layer, right?
ni, it depends on what you have to get.
look at this example
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/37894364/terlago.pdfBeyond that you need vertical, do you have to get something like that?
 
I have to recreate a building, the part that includes the wall in question is in the attached image, is the first floor of the house.
Among other things, the floor delimited by the wall has an irregular plant with curved wall parts, and the sides of the roof are tilted. for this I had thought of the grooves, since the design of the perimeter wall I already did.
 

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Got it! but for the beads then it is not necessary to shake the continuous facades, only a texture made as it should be;)
 
If, as you mentioned earlier, you can apply a bump to not have a "flat" texture, in fact it is the quickest solution. I'm better informed about the application of bump textures and see what I can do!
Thanks again.
 

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