christifferdalkarls Posted August 17, 2012 Share Posted August 17, 2012 Hi, I'm doing and following a tutorial created by Ben Tate on CGtuts. I can really recommend his other tutorials if you're green in 3Ds max like me. I am currently working on "The Lantern" and have come to the video part 3 where he goes from having created a pattern from splines, tossed in a shell modifier and made it into edi poly and then chamfering all edges outer. Here comes my problem. Instead of all the edges get a nice curve of 3cm, some polygons turns in the wrong direction. It is obviously I who are doing something seriously wrong because he does the same thing in the video.I have created it from scratch twice and getting stuck at the same step. I enclose two screenprints from 3ds max. One before I put on the chamfer and a post and you will see for themselves how it will be? Forgive me for using the wrong terms, have not been using 3Ds max for more than half a year. Grateful for any help! // Christoffer Dalkarls http://www.dalkarls.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
williamday Posted August 17, 2012 Share Posted August 17, 2012 To me it looks like you have overlapping vertices on the problem areas. I would suggest before you do the chamfer do a select all (ctrl + a) and then do a weld with a very small tolerance. See if that fixes it....just be careful the weld doesn't weld vertices you don't want welded :-) Regards Will Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Corey Beaulieu Posted August 17, 2012 Share Posted August 17, 2012 You don't have an equal number of edges on the sides that you are trying to chamfer between. Before you weld it, try deleting the extra edges then weld to be sure. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
christifferdalkarls Posted August 17, 2012 Author Share Posted August 17, 2012 (edited) Thanks William and Corey! I've tried your idea william and doing an extra weld but with not major changes. I even pumped the numbers up quite high with slight improvement. I havent tried your solution yet Corey but it I will try it out this very moment and post an update once it's done. It's something that I havent put into consideration and it sounds like it could work! Cheers for the help! Edited August 17, 2012 by christifferdalkarls Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peter M. Gruhn Posted August 18, 2012 Share Posted August 18, 2012 There's all those extra edges along the sides that aren't on the fronts. If you select the extra edges and delete with... I think it's ctrl-backspace it will delete the edge AND the verts at the ends. Do some tests to make sure I'm right on that (I'm away from my real machine so I can't check my veracity). If that doesn't work you can target weld the verts or maybe the edges. That's wicked tedious though. You can select edges that have similar orientation, turn edge constraint on, and move them over to the location of good edges, then in verts do a select all, weld. Repeat for the next group of edges. But I'm pretty sure there's a "delete this edge and the end verts" option which would be easiest. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blank... Posted August 19, 2012 Share Posted August 19, 2012 Hi, I'm doing and following a tutorial created by Ben Tate on CGtuts. I can really recommend his other tutorials if you're green in 3Ds max like me. I am currently working on "The Lantern" and have come to the video part 3 where he goes from having created a pattern from splines, tossed in a shell modifier and made it into edi poly and then chamfering all edges outer. Hello, i tried that tutorial some time ago and had issues with chamfering. First thing is to ask yourself, are all those cuts that are cut manually really necessary? Yes, face will be ngon, but chamfering turned out to be much cleaner without cutting it into all quads. And since none of the metal lantern parts will be bending there should be no problem (unless you're planing on exporting it to some other application). Second solution is to not do the chamfers at all, if the lantern wont be seen in close-up. Both mental and vray have some rounded edges option. Third, and possibly the best solution, is not to use extrude modifier on the spline, but bevel modifier. It has several levels with which you can create nice "chamfered" edges and than use symmetry modifier to create the other side. This is what i eventually created, starting with that lantern: http://dariorubilovic.deviantart.com/#/d4rw3zx Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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