Love your content. Just some questions. As you mentioned in the video I have trouble importing sketch-up files into Rhino. It keep saying the memory is insufficient? Do you know how to manage this kind of problem?
Thanks! I appreciate it. Well, the more memory you have, the better. For example, I have 64gb of ram memory on my system and it doesn't have any problems importing big files. However, if you don't have that much memory, then the best option would be to first simplify SketchUp model directly in Sketchup and divide it into a couple of segments. For example, this model is very heavy because of the furniture elements. If I take out furniture elements, I have no problems importing this in Rhino, but if you really want to use those exact furniture elements, you want to import only 1 instance in Rhino, and then "rebuild it in Rhino" and then just multiply it a couple of times (for example dinning chairs, sofas etc). In some cases, you don't even need to rebuild them, if you're just doing it for the diagram like here, but I did it anyways because the file was barely usable as sketchup geometry in Rhino gets broken with thousands of planes and that adds a lot of weight. Also, you want to explode any components/blocks that come from Sketchup to Rhino and make them as groups and rebuild them (one useful command here is MergeAllCoplanarFaces). Hope that helps :)
@@lightips Yep, you just press "prt sc' button and it pops up. You can also save the image to your clipboard and paste it later on where ever you want, like Zoom chat etc :)
It was inside the Sketchup model that I imported in Rhino and had to optimize that geometry for Rhino and clean it up. There's a link in the description for the original Sketchup model that was used as a base.
@@tomasdesigner4293 It's just the way that I did it in this tutorial, you can apply them to Layers if it makes more sense to you. Yes, you can pretty much any clipping material and apply it as a section material.
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Welcome :)
Can you make another video showing an Axonometric Diagram NOW taking a section cut from left to right?
Damn man your rhino interfaz look full of tool in plugging jejejje is really helpfully now this vid. Now for me cuz i doing mi project tesis
It's just a couple of plugins, everything else are Rhino toolbars :) Glad you liked the video. Good luck with your thesis Juan :D
@@HowtoRhino I what to show you my model
Sure, just email it to me and I'll take a look :)
Love your content. Just some questions. As you mentioned in the video I have trouble importing sketch-up files into Rhino. It keep saying the memory is insufficient?
Do you know how to manage this kind of problem?
Thanks! I appreciate it. Well, the more memory you have, the better. For example, I have 64gb of ram memory on my system and it doesn't have any problems importing big files. However, if you don't have that much memory, then the best option would be to first simplify SketchUp model directly in Sketchup and divide it into a couple of segments. For example, this model is very heavy because of the furniture elements. If I take out furniture elements, I have no problems importing this in Rhino, but if you really want to use those exact furniture elements, you want to import only 1 instance in Rhino, and then "rebuild it in Rhino" and then just multiply it a couple of times (for example dinning chairs, sofas etc). In some cases, you don't even need to rebuild them, if you're just doing it for the diagram like here, but I did it anyways because the file was barely usable as sketchup geometry in Rhino gets broken with thousands of planes and that adds a lot of weight. Also, you want to explode any components/blocks that come from Sketchup to Rhino and make them as groups and rebuild them (one useful command here is MergeAllCoplanarFaces). Hope that helps :)
What is the software that you use to take screenshots? It looks cool...
Yep! It's pretty useful. It's called Lightshot :)
Thank you! I use greenshot but that one looks usefull for some situations... Its fast!
@@lightips Yep, you just press "prt sc' button and it pops up. You can also save the image to your clipboard and paste it later on where ever you want, like Zoom chat etc :)
Quick question, how do you get all the furniture for the interior?
It was inside the Sketchup model that I imported in Rhino and had to optimize that geometry for Rhino and clean it up. There's a link in the description for the original Sketchup model that was used as a base.
I couldn't find Ambient O. in vray tab
You know that you can apply materials to layers
Yes, of course :)
So why apply materials to objects but not to layers? Is it possible to make clipping material render properly (matt/glossy)?
@@HowtoRhino For the infinite plane wrapper material would render better edges in alpha channel
@@tomasdesigner4293 It's just the way that I did it in this tutorial, you can apply them to Layers if it makes more sense to you. Yes, you can pretty much any clipping material and apply it as a section material.
@@HowtoRhino But in my case applied section material renders as plain flat color, but not as proper material