hey, great tutorial, but the settings are way too high to start with, so for example, what could be a value that can be lowered down without compromising the final effect too much?
Well, it's really hard to answer this. Why? Because it depends on scale of your scene...
Best thing I can recommend at the moment is to try playing around with resolution. If you're creating water, then default density is usally fine, try lowering resolution. Maybe increase internal pressure for 10x
Example, if it was 0.001 try 0.01.
You should end up with around 30-50k particles when testing, for final simulation, you could go up to 150 to 300k...
Yes it is, and since I made many testings after this video what I've found is that you can use lower settings and get almost same result. Feel free to play around with settings since this just a tutorial to get people started with some basics.
Your mic sucks
paziipa 1 year ago
@paziipa
Yes, I am aware of it. :)
syso01 1 year ago
hey, great tutorial, but the settings are way too high to start with, so for example, what could be a value that can be lowered down without compromising the final effect too much?
tnx
deimos2k6 2 years ago
Well, it's really hard to answer this. Why? Because it depends on scale of your scene...
Best thing I can recommend at the moment is to try playing around with resolution. If you're creating water, then default density is usally fine, try lowering resolution. Maybe increase internal pressure for 10x
Example, if it was 0.001 try 0.01.
You should end up with around 30-50k particles when testing, for final simulation, you could go up to 150 to 300k...
syso01 2 years ago
that is a very high setting dont you think..?
hachimaki47 2 years ago
Yes it is, and since I made many testings after this video what I've found is that you can use lower settings and get almost same result. Feel free to play around with settings since this just a tutorial to get people started with some basics.
syso01 2 years ago