By bjorn.syse - Fri Nov 14, 2008 7:29 pm
- Fri Nov 14, 2008 7:29 pm
#285096
Hi,
I'm having extremely annoying issues with a not too complicated file (allthough a CAD model of a boat pentry). I've assigned a few material (3) to different surfaces and the materials have textures which are around 8-10 MB large each. Alltogether the geometry takes up ~30 MB of space.
My problems are:
1. When opening the file, it either takes forever (10 minutes). I can see Rhino using up to 1 500 MB of memory, or sometimes it runs out of memory alltogether.
2. If I get this file to open (sometimes it does only take around a minute). When importing something else in there, even if as simple as a cube, this take-forever-procedure is started all over again.
I've found that:
3. If I export this model with the "Geometry only" flag set, the file opens in a flash.
I'm on:
32 Bit Windows Vista with all the latest versions of Rhino and Maxwell. There are no block definitions or Bad objects in this file.
What's going on here? I can not work at all.
Thankful for any input!
Regards,
- Björn
I'm having extremely annoying issues with a not too complicated file (allthough a CAD model of a boat pentry). I've assigned a few material (3) to different surfaces and the materials have textures which are around 8-10 MB large each. Alltogether the geometry takes up ~30 MB of space.
My problems are:
1. When opening the file, it either takes forever (10 minutes). I can see Rhino using up to 1 500 MB of memory, or sometimes it runs out of memory alltogether.
2. If I get this file to open (sometimes it does only take around a minute). When importing something else in there, even if as simple as a cube, this take-forever-procedure is started all over again.
I've found that:
3. If I export this model with the "Geometry only" flag set, the file opens in a flash.
I'm on:
32 Bit Windows Vista with all the latest versions of Rhino and Maxwell. There are no block definitions or Bad objects in this file.
What's going on here? I can not work at all.
Thankful for any input!
Regards,
- Björn
industrial design and visualization (http://www.syse.se)