From the course: AutoCAD: Importing a 2D Project into 3ds Max
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Using Slice Plane to add window sill height
From the course: AutoCAD: Importing a 2D Project into 3ds Max
Using Slice Plane to add window sill height
- [Narrator] As usual, we're staying in our 3D_groundfloor.max scene in 3DS Max. And as you can see, we've now put the bridges across the top of the window opening and across the top of the door opening. So, everything's looking nice and pristine now. And you can see it's still selected because we've got the xyz on the little gizmo showing that the editable polly is selected, because it's not, now, just a group of objects. It's now, what they call, a editable polly in 3DS Max. Now that happened when we converted it to an editable polly after we placed the sliced plane in the last few videos. So what we do there, just click away from it and you can see what it actually looks like without it being selected. You'll notice that those slice plane lines aren't as obvious as they could be. So the idea now, is that we need to place another sliced plane and bridge across where the wall goes from floor to ceil height for the window…
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Contents
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(Locked)
Extruding your external wall boundaries2m 37s
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(Locked)
Using Slice Plane to add door and window heights2m 49s
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(Locked)
Using the Bridge tool for top sections of door and window openings4m 15s
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(Locked)
Using Slice Plane to add window sill height2m 22s
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(Locked)
Using the Bridge tool for wall sections below windows3m 40s
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(Locked)
Extruding your internal wall boundaries2m 51s
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(Locked)
Saving out as a 3ds Max scene1m 36s
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(Locked)
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