Forum Moderators: wheatpenny, TheBryster
Vue F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 30 5:12 am)
I would always prefer to use the original creator software to handle models - as long as it can do that. Only when that is not possible i would look for something else. I think Sketchup should be able to clean and smooth meshes, therefore i always would go for that first. As Gebe already said, it is inportant to know what export format you use from Sketchup.
One day your ship comes in - but you're at the airport.
It has something to do with the way Sketchup builds an object, I think. Maybe Im not understanding it correctly myself - heres how a fellow Sketchup user explained it to me: Smoothing SU meshes is prevented in other 3D apps by the fact that SU outputs single faces. If 4 faces share a point then SU will export 4 points on top of each others instead of only one point. Most 3D apps can't smooth this because they see it as 4 separate faces instead of parts of the same mesh. The solution is to remove all those redundant points. I don't know if Vue can do this for you, but many programs can. trueSpace can not. I'm often using Deep Exploration to "join equal 3D points". Does that make it any clearer? Seeing that TrueSpace isnt able to deal with this problem, I doubt Vue Pro is. By the way: you are really QUICK Gebe!! Thanks!
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With Vue4.2 I run into the problem that I cannot smoothe meshes imported from another application, in this case: Sketchup. The reason is that if connecting faces share points, Sketchup stacks the overlapping points from all connecting faces on top each other rather than turning it into a single point. As a result, Vue reads this as several separate faces rather than a continuous mesh. There are programs out there that can convert the stacked points into a single one, creating a "smoothable" mesh, but I wondered if maybe Pro has an option to do this as well? In that case I would prefer to invest in the upgrade rather than buy a whole new application.