Hi everyone. Happy new year!
my name is Thanassis and I'm doing the C4D Houdini Engine Support in another part of this forum.
I have a general Houdini question.
I was experimenting with the “Melt Object” shelf tool, and I couldn't find a way to retain the detail of the original object.
The SideFX tutorial was very general and only showed how to melt the object NOT how to control it thereafter, or solve problems like this.
When using a VDB workflow, the Convert VDB node has the second input to allow you to define parameters from the original object, thus keeping feature sharp e.t.c. (Compute Vertex Normals, Transfer Surface Attributes, Sharpen Features)
I can't seem to find any equivalent when using the Melt Object Shelf Tool.
Is there a “standard” (and hopefully easy) way to setup a hard edged melting object and retain the model accuracy for the non melted part as close as possible, or do I need to setup an elaborate network?
Mind you, I am a novice so please presume I only know the very basics :-)
Cheers
melting a hard edged object
6261 7 2- noseman
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- Enivob
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- noseman
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Enivob
Have you checked out Ben's tutorial on the subject?
https://vimeo.com/122217238 [vimeo.com]
Oh, yes. Not only that, Ben's tutorial inspired me to create a totally different melting asset that uses TP inside C4D to melt an object. It was part of my C4D - Houdini Engine presentations.
To be honest, melting objects like that is fairly easy, once you understand some Houdini fundamentals, but the problem I'm trying to solve isn't addressed.
The Angel loses its definition because we are converting a mesh to a volume.
For “organic” structures that's fine, but if you are trying to melt a “metal H-beam” for example, that method doesn't retain the solid hard edges.
I have a general idea how to solve the problem, but that requires quite a lot of work:
Convert the solid into a VDB volume, and use VDB clip to subtract the melted portion. Then use the Convert VDB second input to sharpen the features.
The part that melts would be a separate SOP… etc etc.
And I still have no idea how to make the H-Beam bend when it get's too thin.
I was wondering if there's a specific way we can do that as part of the Melt Shelf tool, or something similar.
Cheers
- Hampus Hedberg2
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- noseman
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Hampus Hedberg2
Hmm, I would do my simulation as usual but then use the points from the sim to move the vertices of the original h-beam object and blend it with the fluid sim.
Don't forget to turn off reseeding to get constant points.
So, to make sure I understand, I need to have the original model highly tessellated to begin with, and after the initial movement of the Original vertices, I blend with the sim…
Aha… nice idea!
Thanks for the reply.
Cheers
- Hampus Hedberg2
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- nicoM
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- Hampus Hedberg2
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