Hi there..
im sorry if i repeating the question again..
i using archydro toolbox to make 3D borehole data.
when i looked the tutorial how to make 3D borehole data i found this link (Arc Hydro Groundwater Tutorials | Aquaveo.com) i choose "working with borehole data" the and start following the tutorial.
but i have some problem when i tried to follow the tutor (see images below)
when i tried in ArcScene 10.2, i always got this error (image below)
can anyone help me with this issue?? because i tried figure it out but get stuck what the error is..
thank you
PS: does anyone know how to visualize the well data into 3D with another way??
Solved! Go to Solution.
well, it appears from the first two lines way up in the processing you are tryig to create a geodatabase in a geodatabase rather than a folder.
You seem to be using a personal geodatabase rather than a file geodatabase and your output path is long and contains spaces. If your output type is an esri grid, then you shouldn't be using either. Try your output as a different type in a shorter folder.
As for seeing the images, could you clip your screen grabs to the area containing the information, they are almost impossible to read in any detail and some detail in the results section may be, being clipped
thanks Mr Patterson for replying my question
so this is the tutorial from the website that i attached in above
so in the dialog box i just follow what it said.. the tutorial geodatabes is on .mdb file. should i use .gdb file??
and got result like this.. (using .mdb file)
It must be an old tutorial. Also, the destination mdb .... put it somewhere shorter as suggested. and your current workspace is a gdb instead of a folder
still had same error..
or do you know another way how to visualize well data/borehole data??
i tried to googling but mostly come with add-ins for arcgis
well, it appears from the first two lines way up in the processing you are tryig to create a geodatabase in a geodatabase rather than a folder.
ah i see.. solved now..
thank you very much Mr Patterson
'assumed answer' is good... but for future reference you can mark the answer that provided you with the solution as correct