Volume is wrong when reversed faces are present!
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Dark matter ?
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Could you post an example where the volume is incorrect.
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Here is the example. Left and right, are the same models , but with different orientation of a few faces. You can see that entity info volume is different.It is not so hard to recreate it. Just reverse a few faces and you'll see that volume changes. However, It is not the case when you have only one solid in group. Just when you have a few of them.
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Seems a very nice bug!
Or you have some hidden volumes somewhere -
Even when I fix all the reversed faces, each copy I make has a slightly different volume.
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Explanation !
Inversed volumes are "negative"
So I am not sure that we can consider that as a real bug!
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It's clearer with a distinctive back-face color set in the Style...
BUT, with all of the faces in both 'solid' group consistently oriented their volumes in Entity Info still report as being slightly different !
There are 886 entities in both groups - edges and faces.
If you edit the groups in turn and select all faces [261], then the area of all faces in Entity Info is the same in the two groups !!
If you edit the groups in turn and select all edges [625], then the length of all edges in Entity Info is the same in the two groups !!!The overall XYZ of the two also seems the same !!!!
If you explode the groups and then remake those groups they still retain slightly different volumes.
I am a loss to explain the anomaly
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are the 'copies' always the smaller?
if so does 'Copy' apply rounding down?
thinking out loud...
john -
@driven said:
are the 'copies' always the smaller?
if so does 'Copy' apply rounding down?
thinking out loud...
john
I think you have something !
If you take the group with no reversed faces in it, and make a copy of it using Move+Ctrl then that copy's volume is not exactly the same as the original, although the face areas and edge lengths are reported as being the same !
If you Edit>Copy and then Edit>Paste then that copy is also not the same volume - although its volume difference is perhaps less pronounced.
If you make multiple copies of copies the volume changes each time !!!
Where the copy is added relative to the Origin and the RGB axes also seems to affect the volume difference which can be slightly smaller OR larger !
If you place the copy miles from the original in +ve X its volume grows considerably.
If it's in the -ve X then its volume shrinks considerably.
So it looks like a tolerance issue depending on the container's proximity to the Origin and the +/-ve-ness of the copy's location.
Oddly the face-area and edge-length seem unaffected, when the volume report is different ?
If you copy the Group immediately over the top of the original its volume reports the same, BUT if you then Move it the reported volume changes, moving it back over the original makes their volumes the same once more...
Most weird
Incidentally, making the Group into a Component does not remove the volume anomaly, although the difference seems less noticeable ? -
I prefer green fluo for the internal faces
Some different volumes are not well built!
No coplanar (?) or missing line on the top?...
When you erase this line that open the faces/Volumes!!!
That makes the difference at the end! -
@pilou said:
Explanation !
Inversed volumes are "negative"
So I am not sure that we can consider that as a real bug!
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Yes, I was thinking the same.
I think it would be better not to count reversed solid as negative. I can not think of the proper use for this "feature", only the mess when measuring volumes.And what TIG found out is a real twilight zone. It has something to do with the relativity
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@srx said:
YI can not think of the proper use for this "feature", only the mess when measuring volumes.
And what TIG found out is a real twilight zone. It has something to do with the relativity
It is useful for 3D printing because printed volumes are normally hollow to reduce material use. So if you have an outer sphere and an inner sphere where the faces are reversed, you would get the volume of material used in the 3d printing process instead of the solid volume.
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@unknownuser said:
And what TIG found out is a real twilight zone
I am not sure of that!
It's just these volumes are not orthodox!
If you draw volumes in the rules of art there is absolutly no problemo!
(no bad reversed faces, no forgiven lines, all coplanar faces etc..) -
You got me with that nutty line. But Maybe it was my intention to make it not ortho... It is still a solid, not bad geometry, and has nothing to do with the problem mentioned. I think what TIG has found also has nothing to do with bad geometry. The exact same copy has different volume on different places on UCS... Regarding the negative volume,it is not "physically correct", so I think it could be useful for many people to fix the way SU calculates the volume of reversed faces solids inside the group.
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Make a copy of the group over the top of itself.
Their two volumes report the same.
Now move the copy say 500m in X [red].
Compare the volumes of the two now.
The one you moved will report a different volume, although all of its geometry is identical in count/lengths/areas...
Now move the original over the top of the copy.
Their two volumes report the same - although now the changed value.It seems that a group/instances location relative to the Origin [0,0,0] and its relative position to that along axes affect the reported volume, but it does not affect the reported lengths/areas.
The original post about negative volumes is superseded by this worrying anomaly !
As Jim says, a volume consisting of reversed faces must report as negative.
Imagine a thin walled nutshell...
It has two surfaces, an outer one and inner one.
The outer surface is modeled facing outwards from its solid part.
The inner surface is also modeled facing outwards from its solid part.
If you do a section-cut the inner surface's volume faces appear reversed, and so its volume is negative.
But this is correct.
To get the true volume of the nutshell SketchUp needs to calculate the volume of the outer part and subtract the volume of the inner part.
The only way SketchUp can tell if a volume is to be subtracted is to see if it has a reversed surface.
If the inner surface is reversed to mimic the outer surface then SketchUp will take both as positive volumes and report an incorrect result ! -
Seems working in m3 with 6 decimals there is no more this problem !
inversed faces are always negative but moving group don't change m3 measures
move it to 10 KMS It don't change !
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@unknownuser said:
Make a copy of the group over the top of itself.
Their two volumes report the same.
Now move the copy say 500m in X [red].
Compare the volumes of the two now.You speak about my volume or SRX Volumes ?
Because mine don't change if you Copy move its' copy or the original by 10 Kms in any direction
as shown in my post above!I suspect Unities ! Here i work in meter with 6 decimals
here in negative x
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@srx said:
You got me with that nutty line. But Maybe it was my intention to make it not ortho... It is still a solid, not bad geometry, and has nothing to do with the problem mentioned. I think what TIG has found also has nothing to do with bad geometry. The exact same copy has different volume on different places on UCS... Regarding the negative volume,it is not "physically correct", so I think it could be useful for many people to fix the way SU calculates the volume of reversed faces solids inside the group.
Your composed group has at least two blocks with ugly/=bad geometry that needs to be fixed first.
I suspect that SketchUp will then act as expected: displaying the same volume for all copies. -
@wo3dan said:
....bad geometry that needs to be fixed first.
I suspect that SketchUp will then act as expected: displaying the same volume for all copies.See attached file with explanation. If your geometry is fixed you might optain the same volume.
Even one isolated solid group can act weird like you observed.
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I agree the SRX version has some issues that need fixing.
@Pilou
But the mis-reported volume depending on the object's location occurs in all SKP's not just that one.
Here's an example of a new SKP with a 1m cube.
It displays two different volumes depending on where the group is located relative to the Origin.
Admittedly the variance is small, but it is still there.
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