It’s easy to make a 45 degree axono and a 30 degree iso diagram, but I don’t know how to make diagrams like the images in the example. Is there a way to get a view like the example while maintaining the scale? I searched for information all day but couldn’t find it.
what is it exactly that you wish to replicate? the explosions of the elements or the perspective in general? for the latter, since i have no reference at which proportions the elements are it looks very much just like a parallel perspective to me which you can set by simply switching the projection in the viewport panel to parallel. the command isometric as you might have figured out also sets it to parallel but, you can of course swivel the camera to your likings.
if the elements have a specific elongation you could additionally try to change the view scaling which is under the display modes in your rhino options for each view (for instance wire, shaded) there you change the vertical scale to 1.2 or whatnot.
My explanation was very vague. If you apply the isometric view (NW, NE, SW, SE) set in Rhino, you can create it at the same scale as the 30 degree angle. However, if you rotate it, the values for length, width, and height will each change. This means that an initially 1mx1mx1m box will not become a 1mx1mx1m box when you measure the value after rotating it in isometric (after make2d). If that happens, the ratio by the actual object’s length and height will be broken, which also means distortion of the diagram information. This is why I asked how to prevent the existing length ratio (length, width, height, etc.) from being broken even when rotating in the isometric view.
search this forum for
- Axonometric
- Isometric
kind regards and merry chrismas -tom