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    • boofredlayB Offline
      boofredlay
      last edited by

      Ha, that is great. It is starting to feel like a guard house now. Don't mind at all.

      http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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      • R Offline
        rhankc
        last edited by

        nice job rendering the gate keepers digs,
        With the greening of construction, and the complications pertaining to availability of materials, the cad software has to be flexible so design can be accomplished using methods other than stud construction. There are references to alternate methods on this forum, (carpet tiles to build walls, Joe Woods query for building materials in Europe), where it sounds like quality material is scarce. The quality of framing lumber in the US is no secret, and if we (collectively) develop a new technique or system in the near future (like the robotic layering of concrete slurry, where the bot reads directly off a set of digital drawings, grabs the market,..... Point is...can the formentioned cad program alter its wall composition significantly enough to be useful? or would you be using a simpler program.

        Hank

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        • boofredlayB Offline
          boofredlay
          last edited by

          In Revit, you can make your wall out of anything you want. For example you can make it out of 4" thick peanut butter and add a texture and cut pattern to match, I doubt a structural engineer would stamp that set of drawings however. And I have no idea which hatch would represent peanut butter 8O

          Point is, the program is flexible enough to allow you to incorporate many of the new building methods coming on the market.

          Here is a screenshot of a basic brick on metal stud wall assembly dialog box.

          http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/sas/CornerBar/Wall-Assembly.jpg

          Now if I select the metal stud for further editing(layer 6), here is the materials dialog box.

          http://www.sketchucation.com/forums/scf/sas/CornerBar/Wall-Assembly2.jpg

          http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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          • R Offline
            rhankc
            last edited by

            I know this is weird, but relevant in the green world:
            tires, adobe, icf, logs, and I hate to say this.....strawbale

            Hank

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            • boofredlayB Offline
              boofredlay
              last edited by

              Well, each of these has a nominal thickness right? Then just set up your walls to reflect the thickness. Again, I think it would come down to the sturctural and/or other engineers to decide where and how much of each material but it is definately do-able.

              Edit: And I had to copy/paste your Strawbaletext to see what it was 😉

              http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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              • R Offline
                rhankc
                last edited by

                youdonthave to YELL

                Hank

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                • boofredlayB Offline
                  boofredlay
                  last edited by

                  Sorry, I was trying to be funny, as you typed it really small, I did so really large. I was not yelling at all. If it seemed so to you or anybody I apologize. Just trying to have fun.

                  http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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                  • R Offline
                    rhankc
                    last edited by

                    It all was intended to be Fun, Dont worry no offense was taken at all. Messin around.

                    Hank

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                    • boofredlayB Offline
                      boofredlay
                      last edited by

                      The more I look at my reply above it does seem as if I was yelling. I am so sorry. My lack of foresight into how people read my posts sometimes gets me into trouble.

                      Edit: Thanks.

                      The fact is I never even thought of using Revit in a manner you are talking about. Not being an architect or engineer I see the solution as just tweaking the program to show what needs to be on paper. I believe it would be up to the engineers to decide exactly how such building methods would come together.

                      http://www.coroflot.com/boofredlay

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                      • R Offline
                        rhankc
                        last edited by

                        @unknownuser said:

                        I see the solution as just tweaking the program to show what needs to be on paper

                        Revit is defiantly a good program if it is that versatile, and you dont have to be a Computer Science Guru to make it work dependably.

                        Hank

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