advanced rendering for AutoCAD
Hi Guys,
I’ve offered to help a friend of mine who is a young furniture designer maker. He has just had his first commission piece which is to design and make a bookcase. He has developed a design and has sketched it up. I have been mentoring him and while he was having discussions with his client, I measured up the corner where the bookcase is to go. In order for him to give a quotation, I have recommended that he improves his CAD skills as it can be a huge leap of faith for a potential customer to part with their money on the strength of a thumbnail sketch on the back of a cigarette packet! I have recommended AutoCAD together with AccuRender and have offered to model this project for him to show him what is possible. Although I am proficient in AutoCAD, I am still getting to grips with AccuRender. So I was hoping if I was to upload a model, complete with materials of the room interior where bookcase is to be situated then one of you could have a look at it and recommend improvements. The first problem I have come across is while modelling the room (I used Peter Milner’s template interior as a starting point, and copied his window into mine...thanks Pater) is I am getting a great effect with the light streaming in through window but was wondering should I use an interior light source as well?
I would welcome any feedback which would improve this set up as once perfect it can be used time and again. Thanks in advance..Sean
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Sorry Roy, For being so dim but I am running AutoCAD 2011 and I have AccuRender nXt 310 (06/04/2012) installed and when I follow your instructions and type (nXtEngine 4) at the command, complete with parentheses nothing happens! however it does load when I type NXT. What am I doing wrong?
Type nXt first to load it, then type (nxtengine 4). Low res renderings will process a lot faster. 640 x 480 will be ~ 4x faster than 1280 x 720. The time to render something varies approximately linearly with the total number of pixels.