12-15-2022, 09:07 PM
Hey, tyflow is not really for liquid simulations, but you can get something OK looking with particle physics and particle binds.
I edited only a few things in this sample scene from the tyflow download page (scene "tyFlow_grains_001").
If you fine tune the particle binds/emitter amount/simulation substeps, you can control the viscosity.
Main factor for the viscosity are substeps (time step) and the particle bind settings.
If you try to set the substeps back to 1/2 youll see that its more liquid.
this is saved in max2022 i hope you can open.
I edited only a few things in this sample scene from the tyflow download page (scene "tyFlow_grains_001").
If you fine tune the particle binds/emitter amount/simulation substeps, you can control the viscosity.
Main factor for the viscosity are substeps (time step) and the particle bind settings.
If you try to set the substeps back to 1/2 youll see that its more liquid.
this is saved in max2022 i hope you can open.