Add a New Drawing Plane to a 3D View
A 3D View may contain any number of planes and new planes can be added to any 3D View. In the 3D Viewer, use the Add to 3D > Plane menu option to add a new drawing plane to the current 3D View.
Add a New Drawing Plane to a 3D View dialog options
Enter the name of the new plane to be added to the current 3D View. The new plane is added to the Planes & Surfaces group in the 3D Manager tree. |
|
Plane elevation |
Specify the constant offset from the 3D origin in the direction normal to the new plane coordinate system. The default is zero. |
Surface relief grid (optional) |
You can also select a surface relief grid (optional) if you would like the plane to have relief. Specify the name of the grid file that defines the surface relief. |
Surface Relief Grid dialog options
This dialog will open if a surface relief grid has been specified in the previous dialog.
You can accept the default values for the surface relief grid, or specify the parameters as required. Then, click the OK button to add a plane with surface relief to the current 3D View.
Application Notes
Draw a Plane in a 3D View
Once a 3D View exists, you can draw directly onto planes in the 3D Viewer. For example, you may want to draw contours or symbols on a plane. To do this, you need to make the plane the default drawing plane, after which anything you draw will be drawn directly on the plane in the 3D view. Another way to draw on an existing plane is by copying a View or View/Group that already exists in a 2D view on the same map to a plane in the 3D View.
You can also use the clipboard to cut/copy groups from other maps to the default drawing plane of a 3D view.
To make a plane the default drawing plane:
-
Select (highlight) the plane in the 3D Manager tree; the plane is then highlighted in bold. To change the default drawing plane, simply select another plane in the tree.
-
Run SETDVIEW GX.
About 3D Views
3D Views are rendered coarsely when interactively changing the orientation or point of view. When you release the mouse in any of these modes, the objects will be refined in a way that is optimum for the given point of view. The time it takes to refine the picture depends on processor speed, your 3D Graphics capabilities, the complexity of the 3D model being drawn (number of planes, number of groups, relief resolution, etc.), and the amount of RAM on your system.
3D Views may have clipping areas just like 2D Views. In 3D, the clip area is applied vertically relative to the X,Y coordinate or each plane.
See Also:
Got a question? Visit the Seequent forums or Seequent support
© 2024 Seequent, The Bentley Subsurface Company
Privacy | Terms of Use