sketchucation logo sketchucation
    • Login
    ๐Ÿค‘ SketchPlus 1.3 | 44 Tools for $15 until June 20th Buy Now

    SketchUp v. AutoCAD: SketchUp as toy?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved SketchUp Discussions
    sketchup
    13 Posts 10 Posters 6.1k Views 10 Watching
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • tpstigersT Offline
      tpstigers
      last edited by

      I am more a mapping/GIS person than a modeler, but I am a casual SketchUp user. The recent acquisition has sparked a number of conversations, among users and non-users alike. A colleague of mine mentioned his personal belief that SketchUp does not have the architectural cojones necessary for full production work. His opinion is that SketchUp is a fine tool for preliminary drawings and presentations, but AutoCAD is necessary to produce the kind of drawings needed to actually construct things in the real world.

      My question to you all is: Is my colleague right about this? I don't personally believe so, but I don't possess any first-hand knowledge I can bring to the table.

      And if my colleague is incorrect, can any of you point me to any links that prove it?

      โ€œI have an existential map; it has 'you are here' written all over itโ€

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • pilouP Offline
        pilou
        last edited by

        As it's a polygon modeler, a circle or arc of circle will be always polygons
        So bolean operation between a cube and a sphere will be always critic
        and measures of them will have some little no accuracy
        So your friend is half right ๐Ÿ˜„
        Except that, it's a super toy! Creative fun and easy! ๐Ÿ˜Ž

        Frenchy Pilou
        Is beautiful that please without concept!
        My Little site :)

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • TIGT Online
          TIG Moderator
          last edited by

          He's also half wrong. ๐Ÿ˜’
          When combined with Layout Sketchup can produce whatever Construction Docs you want.
          OK it's not BIM with auto-door scheduling etc, but neither is AutoCAD!
          To suppose that a set of AutoCAD drawings is somehow far more superior is a fallacy.
          I'm old enough to have produced entire working drawing packages drawn by hand, in pencil, with hand lettered notation etc.
          OK, CAD allows you to make changes very quickly, and it can be clear, but it's easy enough to make a set of CAD drawings that look impressive but are full of dire issues - just as you can in any medium.
          Also many CAD-monkeys over polish their drawings, over hatching and over annotating, repeating information at inappropriate scales and so on; a proper set of drawings needs careful structuring and a logical arrangement - like layout drawings with call-outs to detailed drawings and other sheets of related information.
          It ultimately comes down to the guys producing the information.
          I'd prefer to have a clear and correct hand drawn sketch on the back of an envelope, or a screenshot from a SKP, from someone I have confidence in, than a stack of 2d CAD drawings from someone who I don't !

          TIG

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • E Offline
            Ecuadorian
            last edited by

            I find it interesting that this paradigm persists... that construction documents need to be just floor plans, sections and elevations, and that to convey "depth" you need to spend hours using different thickness in lines... thicker for walls closer to you, thinner for those far away. What a waste of time. In reality, this information is more efficiently conveyed by using shadows in said sections/elevation, and by complementing them with sketchy-style perspectives. And SketchUp excels at this. Sure, you can manually add hatched shadows to your CAD drawing, but it's gonna take time.

            It's 2012, people... plotters with restrictive physical pens no longer exist. Color printing is cheap. Gray scale printing is even cheaper. There's no need to be restrained by those old paradigms when creating construction documents.

            -Miguel Lescano
            Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • D Offline
              dsarchs
              last edited by

              I love sketchup, but I have to think your friend is basically right -- in that AutoCAD is needed (or similar) but not that sketchup is JUST a toy.

              Layout is no substitute for serious detailed drawings. Maybe you can do them in LO but it seems more oriented towards making it possible to document a sketchup model than to replace traditional 2d CAD. With the understanding that I DON'T use layout but have only experimented with it in the past, I would compare LO to photoshop before autocad. Both let you place drawings and add text, lines, etc. LO is just optimized to use SU files.

              CAD is still required for its speed, accuracy, XREFs, blocks, and interoperability with other software and consultants.

              Sketchup, to me, is more for marketing and exploring design ideas. Possibly even exporting back into autocad, but the line quality for this is so poor I would just use it as a template and draw over the SU linework. No disrespect to SU, but it's still just a hammer and I have to deal with lots of screws and bolts.

              Knowledge is a polite word for dead but not buried imagination.

              -e.e.cummings

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • BurkhardB Offline
                Burkhard
                last edited by

                The way Autocad goes as leader in CAD went over years, so it is a standart. Time to change the way we were thinking about plans, blocks, xrefs... ๐Ÿ‘Š
                Sketchup can do all things we need for design, construction and making plans. It is you an me who decide what is important ... not Autocad nor any standart which makes life easier for just a short period.
                The most things are grown complicated by our own sights and that's Autocad within the years too.
                The reason why Sketchup is simple and so we love it. โ—

                If someone can not leave this way of thinking ( forced by business ) he will miss a lot of things in Sketchup. But it is not a Toy ๐ŸŽ‰

                [http://www.ia-plus.de(http://www.ia-plus.de)]

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • E Offline
                  Ecuadorian
                  last edited by

                  Well, there's also DraftSight if you need construction documents. It's free and less cluttered than AutoCAD, plus it handles DWG files as its default format.

                  -Miguel Lescano
                  Subscribe to my house plans YouTube channel! (30K+ subs)

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • genma saotomeG Offline
                    genma saotome
                    last edited by

                    WRT doing dimensioning, it seems to me that SU is waaaay less capable than it could and should be.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • bmikeB Offline
                      bmike
                      last edited by

                      been creating drawings of things that get built in sketch up and layout.
                      before that auto cad. before that pencil and drafting board.

                      its a tool. make of it what you will.

                      mike beganyi design + consulting llc

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • jeff hammondJ Offline
                        jeff hammond
                        last edited by

                        yes.. it can be used as a toy.
                        ..a fun one at that.

                        (but I guess the same could be said for a lot of modeling apps.)

                        dotdotdot

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • jeff hammondJ Offline
                          jeff hammond
                          last edited by

                          @tpstigers said:

                          His opinion is that SketchUp is a fine tool for preliminary drawings and presentations, but AutoCAD is necessary to produce the kind of drawings needed to actually construct things in the real world.

                          basically.. it doesn't matter what he says or his opinion (other than using his opinion to build a workflow that suits him)

                          i mean, very real world things have been constructed with sketchup carrying most of the software weight..
                          the facts negate his opinion..

                          dotdotdot

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • pbacotP Offline
                            pbacot
                            last edited by

                            http://forums.sketchucation.com/download/file.php?id=84666&mode=view

                            Having said that...

                            Yes there's room for improvement in SU / LO for Construction drawing 2d features.

                            NO AutoCAD is not the answer. There's many more direct ways of doing it--or

                            BIM is the future.

                            @Ecuadorean: Yes SU Can make good representation of depth:

                            http://forums.sketchucation.com/download/file.php?id=85290&t=1

                            Having said that, NO, decent line work is not a waste of time. It is expressive and clear. Just in the wrong programs it's a PITA and it shows in the general lack of good drawing.

                            So in short. NO and NO. i m H o. Peter

                            MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • jeff hammondJ Offline
                              jeff hammond
                              last edited by

                              here's a neat case study (neat also because the 2nd page shows a plugin used internally by turner which could be seen as a bit of a preview of the type of changes we may see in sketchup itself)

                              Link Preview Image
                              SketchUp Pro Case Study: Turner Construction and the WTC, Part 1

                              Follow the SketchUpdate blog for SketchUp news, modeling tips and tricks, user stories and more.

                              favicon

                              (sketchupdate.blogspot.com)

                              these people are building the tallest building in usa (and i happen to have a perfectly framed view of the thing down my street ๐Ÿ˜‰ )..

                              of course they're not using sketchup as the backbone but they've definitely found a way to integrate it into their company.. and seriously, if sketchup wasn't helping them make things happen, they wouldn't be using it.

                              there isn't a one software solution out there right now.. even i use a two software approach for the drawings (3 if you count layout as a separate software)..

                              i guarantee your friend could find a way to use sketchup in a way that would benefit if he so desired.
                              (ok.. not quite with the guarantee bit.. i don't actually know what he does)

                              [edit] hm.. maybe they aren't building the towers.. just the crazy new downtown station.. in which case, i don't have much of a view of said project..

                              dotdotdot

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • 1 / 1
                              • First post
                                Last post
                              Buy SketchPlus
                              Buy SUbD
                              Buy WrapR
                              Buy eBook
                              Buy Modelur
                              Buy Vertex Tools
                              Buy SketchCuisine
                              Buy FormFonts

                              Advertisement