Hello,
I have created a Generic Model Splash back see below, when i bring this model into a project. the pattern is not able to be aligned to the flooring. what have i done wrong here?
Thank you
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by ToanDN. Go to Solution.
is it a Model Pattern? I'm seeing edges. Looks like individual panels -- possibly arrayed. Maybe a Line-Based Family?
It's is an extrusion 10mm thick with a 600x600mm pattern.
Usually i do this as a 10mm wall face and dont have this issue just wanted to have something abit more solid then a wall finish all the time.
Below you can see the bath tiles and shower tiles dont line up and wont allow me to align them.
...or @Anonymous, if you want to do it as a loadable family, model the full bathtub surround in the family. You could even parameterize it to meet different bathtub sizes and backsplash heights.
I like this idea,
only issue is then in a situation like shown, i wouldn't be able to then align the bath tiles with the shower tiles. Pedantic i know but some clients will request things like this.
Yes, you can align the lines of the tiles on the floor with the lines of the tiles on the wall. For the floor, use a floor element with model hatch pattern (not a pattern-based family!), and for the tiles on the wall, use a thin wall type with a model hatch pattern. Then, align the tiles.
the alignment can be realised by an offset parameter in the family.
In the family:
@Anonymous wrote:
I like this idea,
only issue is then in a situation like shown, i wouldn't be able to then align the bath tiles with the shower tiles. Pedantic i know but some clients will request things like this.
Think about it this way: if your buy prefab units with tile built-in then the pattern should be in the family; if you build them on site then the pattern should be in project to fit various conditions.
But what is the purpose or advantage in spending time making a family with a grid pattern instead of simply using a floor or wall with a model surface pattern?
@Alfredo_Medina wrote:But what is the purpose or advantage in spending time making a family with a grid pattern instead of simply using a floor or wall with a model surface pattern?
Dunno, @Alfredo_Medina. I'm not advocating the approach and don't use it. We use walls and floors. But still, I found @FAIR59's approach a clever and applicable workaround. I'm glad I learned about. Maybe I'll find a use for it. Maybe I won't. Always fun learning new stuff though.
It´s like making a parametric detail item family with rows and columns, to produce a schedule, instead of using the built-in schedule feature.
oh, I don't know that I would go that far, @Alfredo_Medina. It's just a little trick. Whether or not it rises to the level of being a useful trick, is probably slim. But, for the moment, it's interesting.
I still think your right, wall and floors are the best way to answer my question. I have been doing my splashbacks this way.
I tried to duplicate the outcome using a family. I like the idea of using families for things, i just think they are a more solid approach then using walls and having to constantly disallow join for the main stud framing. Also when you have parts of a wall with full high tiles then a 100mm skirting tile then another tile maybe at a second height again. can get fiddly with walls.
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