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    3D Truss Models

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    • medeekM Offline
      medeek
      last edited by

      Downloaded the new 2016 SketchUp and installed the plugin, no issues thus far so I'm going to say its 2016 compatible.

      For now I'm going to stay with the current .rbs encryption method otherwise the plugin will not work with previous versions of SketchUp.

      Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
      Medeek Engineering Inc
      design.medeek.com

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      • medeekM Offline
        medeek
        last edited by

        Outlookers enabled under advanced roof options for Common, Scissor and Attic truss types.

        http://design.medeek.com/resources/images/truss_su19_800.jpg

        Not really sure what is the best treatment of the outlookers at the peak of the roof and consequently what is best way to space them. Measure them from the peak or the eave/fascia?

        One thing worth noting here is that structural outlookers are also enabled but I have not yet coded in the dropped top chord gable end trusses that would match structural outlookers, something for another day. Due to the option of vertically or horizontally oriented outlookers the configuration of a dropped top chord gable end truss can take two configurations. For attic trusses this gets even more complicated at the gable end, hence I haven't even attempted the gable end truss option for attic truss types yet.

        The hot items on the todo list right now are:

        • Tail Bearing Trusses
        • Gambrel Attic Trusses
        • Dual Pitch Trusses
        • Rafter Roof (Gable and Hip)
        • Valley Truss Set
        • Hip Truss Sets

        If you feel like something should take precedence over these items please advise.

        Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
        Medeek Engineering Inc
        design.medeek.com

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        • medeekM Offline
          medeek
          last edited by

          Version 1.1.3 - 11.21.2015
          Outlookers enabled under advanced roof options for Common, Scissor and Attic truss types.
          Gable end trusses enabled for (2/2, 4/4) scissor truss types.

          http://design.medeek.com/resources/images/truss_su20_800.jpg

          Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
          Medeek Engineering Inc
          design.medeek.com

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          • pbacotP Offline
            pbacot
            last edited by

            Very nice. Around here we just put a vertical block at the ridge behind the barge rafter and the first outlooker (outrigger) is spaced away from this. Also when a rafter is over the gable wall and the outrigger is structural (commonly it is), the lowest one is spaced away from the birdsmouth so the notch doesn't weaken the rafer so much..

            MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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            • medeekM Offline
              medeek
              last edited by

              Outlookers get a little complicated depending on whether they are structural or not. Typically around here we see them at 24" on center and they are usually structural. The top chord of the truss is dropped either 1.5" or 3.5" depending on if they are oriented horizontally or vertically. With structural lookouts the first lookout from the eave is usually non-structural since the dropped top chord truss will have a special slider attached to top chord to achieve the overhang. See image below:

              http://design.medeek.com/resources/truss/DOCUMENTS/SAMPLES/B15050134-Shops_Page_1.jpg

              Usually the sheeting goes on starting at the bottom so based on that the lookouts would be measured from the bottom edge of the sheeting so that they line up with the seams every 48".

              I've seen a single vertical placed the ridge when the outlookers are vertical however what is common practice when the outlookers are horizontal?

              Notice the different configuration of the top chord when the drop is only 1.5" (oriented flat).

              http://design.medeek.com/resources/truss/DOCUMENTS/SAMPLES/Dropped_Top_Chord_2.jpg

              If the overhang is zero then this slider or splice goes away.

              http://design.medeek.com/resources/truss/DOCUMENTS/SAMPLES/Lot-146-Truss-Profiles_11.jpg

              Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
              Medeek Engineering Inc
              design.medeek.com

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              • medeekM Offline
                medeek
                last edited by

                A dropped top chord with flat orientation might look something like this (spliced top chord):

                http://design.medeek.com/resources/truss/DOCUMENTS/SAMPLES/Dropped_Top_Chord_3.jpg

                Without an overhang the gable end truss becomes (no splice or slider required):

                http://design.medeek.com/resources/truss/DOCUMENTS/SAMPLES/Dropped_Top_Chord_4.jpg

                Note that the outlookers would probably be spaced from the bottom at 24" on center, so this model is not quite correct.

                Another interesting point to note is that if the overhang or top chord of the truss is a 2x4 and one wants to use structural 2x6 vertical outlookers at the gable end. How would that work, I don't think it would at least not easily. If the outlookers are structural and vertical I will constrain them to be the same depth as the top chord in order to simplify things. This applies to imperial or metric, units are not a factor.

                I'm going to need some serious logic to properly deal with gable end trusses and outlookers in order to properly cover all of the options and possible configurations, especially when you throw raised heel trusses into the mix.

                Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                Medeek Engineering Inc
                design.medeek.com

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                • medeekM Offline
                  medeek
                  last edited by

                  Vertical structural outlookers with 12" overhang and 16" gable overhang:

                  http://design.medeek.com/resources/truss/DOCUMENTS/SAMPLES/Dropped_Top_Chord_5.jpg

                  Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                  Medeek Engineering Inc
                  design.medeek.com

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                  • jujuJ Offline
                    juju
                    last edited by

                    steam rolling ahead!

                    Save the Earth, it's the only planet with chocolate.

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                    • medeekM Offline
                      medeek
                      last edited by

                      Just for fun I was playing with Thea a bit this afternoon. I might have to purchase this render software its really quite nice:

                      http://design.medeek.com/images/misc/testhouse3_1024.jpg

                      Does anyone have a better wood grain or color to use when rendering lumber? As you can see the striations don't really line up with the direction of the lumber.

                      Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                      Medeek Engineering Inc
                      design.medeek.com

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                      • medeekM Offline
                        medeek
                        last edited by

                        @juju said:

                        steam rolling ahead!

                        Note, I have not coded the dropped top chord variants into the plugin yet I'm just verifying the correct way to frame out these different options with feedback from others before I commit to a specific method.

                        I've spent some time chatting with some of my contractor friends and the consensus seems to be that measuring the outlookers from the bottom is fairly standard practice. There does seem to be disagreement on how best to deal with outlookers at the peak though. I like the idea of two outlookers each side of the ridge. Some say one vertical, others say none provided the last two adjacent outlookers are relatively close to the peak (I wish they would quantify what close means).

                        I would like to get this as close to realistic as possible regardless of the logic and complexity otherwise what is the point. I'm not into modeling cartoons, I want it as you would build it.

                        Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                        Medeek Engineering Inc
                        design.medeek.com

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                        • N Offline
                          nlipovac
                          last edited by

                          @medeek said:

                          Just for fun I was playing with Thea a bit this afternoon. I might have to purchase this render software its really quite nice:

                          http://design.medeek.com/images/misc/testhouse3_1024.jpg

                          Does anyone have a better wood grain or color to use when rendering lumber? As you can see the striations don't really line up with the direction of the lumber.

                          As for wood grain, easiest way is to do texturing inside SU (for me anyway), and then use Thea to render.
                          I would then use IBL (Some studio setup HDRI) + SUN button for light and Ground button to have base plane for shadows,and all this takes 10 min to setup.
                          My biased opinion is to go and buy Thea, it is one great product with +5 integration with SU.

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                          • medeekM Offline
                            medeek
                            last edited by

                            Outlookers enabled under advanced roof options for Monopitch truss types.

                            http://design.medeek.com/resources/images/truss_su21_800.jpg

                            Also fixed all truss types so that the outlookers are measured from the bottom. I also added the option to include outlookers at the peak.

                            Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                            Medeek Engineering Inc
                            design.medeek.com

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                            • medeekM Offline
                              medeek
                              last edited by

                              Does anyone have any good resources for working with dynamic components within the API? I really would like to make the top chords dynamic so that the overhang can be adjusted after the fact if necessary.

                              Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                              Medeek Engineering Inc
                              design.medeek.com

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                              • medeekM Offline
                                medeek
                                last edited by

                                Version 1.1.4 - 11.25.2015
                                Structural outlookers (vert. & horz.) enabled under advanced roof options for Common (Fink) truss type.
                                Structural outlookers (vert. & horz.) enabled under advanced roof options for Common (Fink) truss type with raised heel (vertical w/ strut).

                                http://design.medeek.com/resources/images/truss_su22_800.jpg

                                Notice that when structural outlookers are selected the top chord of the gable end truss is dropped accordingly. This may look simple now that I've got it working (at least for one type of common truss) but the amount of logic required to make sure everything comes out right is somewhat mind boggling.

                                Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                                Medeek Engineering Inc
                                design.medeek.com

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                                • pbacotP Offline
                                  pbacot
                                  last edited by

                                  Nice work. It is scary how much you are able to do and what goes into all this. The clean output is what we see--and so many options worked in.

                                  For texture I think you also have to look into ruby to find out how to orient it the way you want. It doesn't matter what texture you use.

                                  There are some good NPR wood textures in the Sketchucation store, but I am not sure if it contains one that would give you the fresh douglas fir look.

                                  MacOSX MojaveSketchUp Pro v19 Twilight v2 Thea v3 PowerCADD

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                                  • medeekM Offline
                                    medeek
                                    last edited by

                                    Thank-you for the vote of confidence. Sometimes I feel like I am digging a bit deep when it comes to all of these options it certainly adds to the amount of code required and the complexity. Some options are also dependent on others so it becomes a tangled web that requires careful analysis to mare sure that certain options can still work when others are not enabled. The good news is that I've probably got most of the options added to the fink truss that I will ever add so further complexity should not be too much of a problem. Now it is just a matter of adding different truss types, and other related items, more breadth and less depth.

                                    If it can be mathematically modeled then it can be programmed into the plugin. What you are seeing on your screen or in SketchUp is a visual representation of a mathematical model of the truss group and associated framing.

                                    Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                                    Medeek Engineering Inc
                                    design.medeek.com

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                                    • medeekM Offline
                                      medeek
                                      last edited by

                                      Version 1.1.5 - 11.25.2015

                                      • Added Double Fink common truss type.
                                      • Structural outlookers (vert. & horz.) enabled under advanced roof options for Common (Double Fink) truss type.

                                      http://design.medeek.com/resources/images/truss_su23_800.jpg

                                      Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                                      Medeek Engineering Inc
                                      design.medeek.com

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                                      • medeekM Offline
                                        medeek
                                        last edited by

                                        Version 1.1.6 - 11.26.2015

                                        • Added Fan and Mod Queen common truss types.
                                        • Structural outlookers (vert. & horz.) enabled under advanced roof options for Common (Fan & Mod Queen) truss types.

                                        http://design.medeek.com/resources/images/truss_su24_800.jpg

                                        Four more common truss types still need to be added:

                                        • Double Howe (6/6)
                                        • Mod Fan (8/4)
                                        • Triple Fink (8/7)
                                        • Triple Howe (8/8)

                                        For very large buildings one could also consider:

                                        • Quad Fan (10/5)
                                        • Quad Fink (10/9)
                                        • Quad Howe (10/10)
                                        • Quin Fan (12/6) ...

                                        A quad fink truss (10/9) with a raised heel (slider):

                                        http://www.selecttrusses.com/wp-content/uploads/Ag1.jpg

                                        Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                                        Medeek Engineering Inc
                                        design.medeek.com

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                                        • jujuJ Offline
                                          juju
                                          last edited by

                                          Wow, seriously, wow. How is the manual coming along?

                                          Save the Earth, it's the only planet with chocolate.

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                                          • medeekM Offline
                                            medeek
                                            last edited by

                                            What format would be the best for the manual? I am kind of thinking along the lines of HTML documentation similar to the way SketchUp help files are organized but I'm still thinking about this.

                                            The biggest problem right now is the plugin has been rapidly progressing and evolving so its a bit hard to set out a manual that won't need major revisions/rewrite in the very near future.

                                            I'm thinking though in another month or two I should have something together.

                                            Nathaniel P. Wilkerson PE
                                            Medeek Engineering Inc
                                            design.medeek.com

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