You may want to try the cgchat list Bear provides. I remember some discussion regarding dense curves coming in from EIM and think I remember hearing a solution.
I don’t know of one but have seen the problem you mention.
You may want to try the cgchat list Bear provides. I remember some discussion regarding dense curves coming in from EIM and think I remember hearing a solution.
I don’t know of one but have seen the problem you mention.
I imagine someone might know at the platter, but no, this list here:
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Jens,
I looked for an answer at PostForum and could only find a reference by David Argemi to the use of WireUtil for this purpose. Please post your solution if you find one. Good luck!
Jim Mulcahy
Mmmhhh, ok this might not help you but is worth mentioning, i think. I created an “regular N-sided Polygon” with 36 segments, uncovered it and exported it as .sat for ViaCAD. In ViaCAD it show´s exactly the same amount of segments.
Regards
Stefan
What about the LODe Stone plugin at NorthernLights?
It claims to reduce the number of polygons in any model.
Jim Mulcahy
Lodestone might be an interesting solution, allowing you to dynamically adjust the resolution of the wires on a as needed basis, however additional plugins in the Swage hierarchy will eventually complicate things or even slow things down if it gets too involved. You’d probably see the hit everytime you modify something and all the Lodestone calls would have to come into play.
I’m also assuming that Jens wants to use EIM over Trestle because EIM has 2D booleens and other 2D drawing functions Trestle lacks. However for basic shapes Trestle is ideal. It allows for Master/Slave drawing and animation capabilities so one rib of the Zeppelin could be drawn and all slave “ribs” could be reshaped instantly.
To solve Jens’ problem, the imported source child profile/polyline must be addressed. I’ll take a look into EIM again too to see if I can find a wire tesselation setting otherwise, another solution would be use FormZ. Polyline DXF files work as Swage children, and I believe formZ has a pretty decent level of control over tesselation.
I do not understand Viacad… sorry. All my wires come into it split up into single segments, and not polylines… what settings must I use? Can I join single segments into one wire?
I do not have FormZ so that is out of question for me now.
Yes, I use EIM because this needs to be really precise and it gives me the necessary tools to do it. And I do not want to animate the shape of the zeppelin…
Lod Stone… I don’t know if it also reduces vertices in wires. I would save out wires as facts anyway so I guess it would not burden the rest of the modeling process…
Bear said to me that wire tesselation is broken in EIM 
Jeez… why is everything always so complicated. I am really frustrated since this really started well… and now I am fiddeling around with inappropriate software… Instead to model this right away I need to find ways for such simple things as WIRES… its rediculous
That’s one of the reasons I find Viacad not as useful…individual segments, while maybe technically reasonable, certainly not production valid.
Try Rhino and export curves as DXF? Rhino wiull import iges from EIM either OSX or Windows.
EI’s biggest short-coming is getting data in and getting data out from other apps. I’ve spent many, many hours finding workable solutions for this sort of thing and constantly hitting up against it.
I don’t have ViaCad with me right now but here is a 36 sided polygon from FormZ exported to DXF (2004) as polylines. Check if this works. I will check tonight with ViaCad for the right settings if it is not solved in the meantine.
Hahaha, that is the fun of the process. Sorry for the frustration. I was trying to see if i could get some work around i came up using C4D. I dont have swage but it came out with 260 vertices i know it is not much but i try.
Jens,
While I respect you wanting to work in EIM, there are quite a few drawing tools in Trestle that could assist you.
There is a snapping grid, insert points, horizontal and vertical align tools, scaling, mirroring, equidistant tools, and predefined shapes. Can you post a picture of what your ribs look like so I could see if its something Trestle could create?
Ultimately, this is why I wanted the Igors to support EPS import in Trestle. It would be ideal in this situation if the rib is a very unique shape or difficult to draw. EPS could be a universal standard. But… you can create any kind of standard poly sided shape you want in Trestle instantly. Just type it in and bang its there.
Sorry not for mentioning that they come in as seperated lines, SORRY!
To join simply use the “join curve” tool. It´s located under the white cursor item, the 5th which says “trim”, click on that and go to the 5th menu item there.
Regards
Stefan
Can you give me a clue please? When i import the same file from EIM as .iges into Rhino OSX beta they come in also as 36 segments, like the EIM .sat file for ViaCAD.
Regards
Stefan
With Rhino just marquee select and hit the ‘join’ tool…it’ll join whatever you had selected. Curves, surfaces etc.
Finally I did:
EIM -> iges -> Rhino (stiching) -> DXF -> Transporter -> EI
what a pain… For DXF to work proper each wire must be on a seperate layer to come over to EI as a single group. Have not tried colors though…
Jens
Good that you got it worked out. Rhino is very good at reading and writing different formats - I would be lost without it. For the most part it’s done very, very well.
I’m sure that was a pain and makes one wonder why they have to go through such hoops as that:-) One app which does everything exceptionally well and is a breeze to use…until then it seems having a good collection of them is the only way to get projects done.