This is the place where the simulation preferences are defined.
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This is the threshold used to consider if an object with a RFCollider is being deformed or just transformed. A bigger value would recompute less often the colliding geometry, thus providing a better performance. However, if the value is too high there might appear differences between the real object and the geometry "seen" by RealFlow. If the value is too small, some objects that are just animated (or parented) may be considered deformed just because of precision errors, decreasing the simulation performance greatly.
The value represents a percentage of the distance between every vertex and the center of mass of every object. The default value of 0.5% should work for most parented objects.
Auto Params
When enabled, RealFlow | Cinema 4D applies default settings. These default values work for most projects with PDB or SPH fluids, but for other materials (granular, viscous, etc.) it is normally necessary to apply custom settings. This also applies to simulations with collision geometry involved.
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Here you find the minimum and maximum numbers of simulation steps. Substeps play an important role for collision detection. If you see particles going through a solid object
- increase the Min and Max substeps in the Scene Solver
- decrease the object's "Cell Size" in the "Volume" tag
- enable "Continous Collision Detection" in the "Collider" tag
- try do reduce the particles speed with a "Drag Force" daemon
- if possible, make the collision object thicker.
- If you see popping particles while the fluid settles try to increase "Min Iterations" and/or "Min Substeps".
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