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#1 |
Member
Expert member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 89
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hey i have a problem...i got a model that has all the interior and exterior moodelled together but stuck together, is there anyway to texture the interior?
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#2 |
Senior Member
Professional user
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 369
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Only way is to select an interior surface, then select all connected surfaces, hoping that the exterior is not connected. Then make this interior a separate object.
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Regards, Gerry "Mossie" Mos -------------------------------------------------------------------------- WW1 Aircraft Library http://ww1-aircraft.info/ Mossie 3D CAD, "Prompt and Precise" http://mossie3dcad.com/ |
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#3 |
Member
Expert member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 89
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how to select the surrounding surfaces?
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#4 |
Senior Member
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Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: UK
Posts: 369
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There is a plugin for "Select connected surfaces"
See http://www.inivis.com/forum/showthre...ected+surfaces
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Regards, Gerry "Mossie" Mos -------------------------------------------------------------------------- WW1 Aircraft Library http://ww1-aircraft.info/ Mossie 3D CAD, "Prompt and Precise" http://mossie3dcad.com/ |
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#5 |
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Portland, OR
Posts: 604
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I'm assuming here that there is just one "fuselage"....
1) Select that fuselage and make a copy of it; rename it "interior". 2) Make both your original fuselage and your new "interior" ONE-SIDED objects. 3) Select your interior copy, and flip the normals/surfaces so that they face into the aircraft. The original fuselage's normals should face outside the aircraft. 4) For your interior, select the parts of it that are not visible from the cockpit (usually, anything forward of the front firewall, anything rearward of the back firewall or seat back, anything lower than the cockpit deck) and delete them. 5) Size your interior to be slightly smaller along the height and width dimensions (95 - 98%) 6) Work with your interior walls to create the top ledges, and any horizontal or vertical framework. 7) Extrude the various framework to create the interior shell. 8) Create a deck, according to your photos or plan. 9) Likewise select the interior of the canopy framing and add dimension to those (usually much thinner than your cockpit wall framing; about 0.08m thick or so; but depends on the era of the aircraft; modern jet structures tend to be quite a bit thicker than WWII framing) Obviously, you can now texture your interior without affecting the outer skin.
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