Some Sketchup questions

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RogerS

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I have a few questions that I'm struggling to work out.

1) Is there any way to have one object/(entity?) on the page drawn to one scale and another object drawn to a different scale? I'm trying to draw a 2D casement window..I got there with the window eventually but if I draw a cross section of the frame it is way too small to see.

2) How do I 'unmake' a component? I mucked up some glazing panes and wanted to 'unmake' the component but can't see how to to this.

EDIT: Found the right-click menu that has Explode and other essential goodies like Flip


Any help very welcome.....sheesh, it's a difficult learning curve, is Sketchup.
 
When drawing in any cad program it should be drawn at full scale 1:1.
Then the scale is chosen for the drawings to be printed out at. To have more than one scale in use on a drawing requires viewports set to each scale, does sketchup have this facility?
I never use s/u as it could not do what I needed when it came out, so ended up staying with Autocad and that learning curve is catenary! :lol:
Rob.
 
I don't know...viewports???

What I'm trying to mimic is a drawing of a casement window for a planning application. I'm basing it on one done by a firm of architects that I found in a planning application on the web. They've done it freehand. So dead easy for them to do the internal elevation scale 1:5 and then the glazing bar and jamb (strange term for a window!) at 1:1

Think I'll have to fudge it.

I did go and buy a small drawing board intending to do it paper and pencil...as I couldn't face the Sketchup learning curve. Then I saw my pitiful tech drawing.....so have spent all day struggling with Sketchup.
 
Sketchup is a design and development tool. The pro version seems to be good for presentation too. Not so sure the free one is.

The basic concept of a drawing as said above is to draw everything full size. In Autocad you can then make a presentation view of your drawing by putting together a collection of 'viewports' that are effectively windows (as in computer :) ) showing some of your drawing detail. You arrange a collection of these viewports on a layout representing the paper sheet it will eventually be printed on and end up with a drawing ready to print.

Free sketchup can't do that at all so some kind of fudge is needed :)

As to your scaling copy your component..... right click the new copy and 'make unique' then scale it how you want. make unique is good for components that have minor differences - copy it, make unique then double click it to edit it. You don't need to explode anything.
 
No.

You print it to a scale.... or just to 'fit the paper' size

If you want the same thing in 2 sizes on the same sheet of paper that is where your fudge comes in - just for presentation.

Sketchup can be confusing when printing.

it prints what you see on screen - objects and the space around them. So if you want your objects filling the page you have to zoom in to fill the screen before you hit print.

2 edits so far^ :)
 
Roger
You model at full scale. As Robert says, Printing is a pain, but he has a good tut here:
https://www.ukworkshop.co.uk/forums/view ... hp?t=29055

To do your extra-big detail bit:

Copy your jamb to another place in the model.
Make a rectange which cuts across it at the section plane.
Select new copy and the plane, Right Click, Intersect with Model.

This will produce lines at the cross-section.

Delete everything you don't want.

Select the section line and use the scale tool. You can get exactly 5x by typing 5, 5 in the VCB.

You have your 5x section.

Yes, Viewports would be nice! And indeed, they are available in the Pro version, in Layout.

S

PS Remember, if you are printing out, you are restricted to fairly low res in the free version.
 

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