advanced rendering for AutoCAD
Hi Guys,
I took the plunge last night and purchased AccuRender nXt. I have been using AutoCAD for many years to produce 2D drawings then moved on to 3D modelling. I was dissatisfied with AutoCAD’s built in render engine and tried AccuRender AR3, it was an improvement on AutoCAD but still didn’t match up to Vray, Vray is a rendering package my former employee had started to use alongside Rhino. I aspired to produce professional images like his and even undertook a course to use Rhino, simply so I could use Vray which was not compatible with AutoCAD. But as ever time was a factor and I didn’t commit to learning the software. I recently came back to AccuRender nXt and was impressed enough by the forum gallery, especially Peter Milner’s rendering which are awesome to have a second look at AccuRender..
I learn best by seeing what is possible and striving to replicate hence the getting started tutorial was invaluable where you have to produce a fishing rod from the given dwg file and textures.
http://www.accurender.com/page/help-reference
I also downloaded Peter’s model..
http://www.accurender.com/forum/topics/sample-interior?id=6293855%3...
Alongside the image of the final rendering. This would have been great as I mainly design furniture and hoped to use Peter’s studio setup for my initial rendering until I became proficient enough to create my own. Unfortunately although I could down load and open the file, when I tried to launch AccuRender nXt my PC just hung and froze and I had to reboot each time. I even tried deleting the furniture to make it a smaller file as I thought my PC wasn’t up to handling large files but to no avail.
If any you guys have good rendered images of furniture I would be grateful if you could share the CAD file, file image and textures so I could try to emulate them.
Look forward to being a member of the forum, learning from your combined knowledge and experience and spending some long, often frustrating and finally rewarding days rendering...
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For interior models a great starting enviroment is the standard "studio" light scheme.
If you work in a lot of wood grains get familar with the mapping options (these were a real trick for me at first).
As you get to where you add lights or light fixtures don't overlook the use of lighting channels.
I don't think the sample from Peter should have put a great burden on your machine. I don't know why you had issues with it.
So I did try this out. No real problems running this on a 32 bit system-- a tad sluggish maybe-- but really fine. Allocated about 630MB of memory-- very comfortable. Not sure what's up in your case. I did the following: