$collisionmodel
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The QC command $collisionmodel is used to embed a non-animated collision mesh in a model, for use in VPhysics calculations.
$collisionjoints instead.vcollide_wireframe 1 to view collision meshes in-game.Usage
$collisionmodel "<collision mesh SMD>.smd" { <options> }
Options
$mass <float|kilograms>- Manually set the mass of the model.
$automass- Tells StudioMDL to calculate the mass of the model (based on the volume of the collision SMD and the density/thickness of the material defined in its prop_data).
$concave- By default StudioMDL will generate a single convex hull by bridging any concavities in a collision SMD. You can create a concave hull by including multiple, overlapping convex meshes in your SMD, and using the $concave command to tell StudioMDL to preserve concavities by using multiple convex pieces. The resulting hull structure is a bit like a Rigid ragdoll.
$maxconvexpieces <int>- By default, StudioMDL limits a concave collision model to twenty convex pieces. This command can be used to override the limit - for instance if you are creating an unusually large model.
Note:Introduced with the Orange Box. In the Ep1 engine, run StudioMDL with -fullcollidewhen compiling instead.$masscenter <vector|offset>- Override the center of mass, in local coords.
$inertia <float|scale>- Inertia scale.
$damping <float|scale>- Linear damping scale.
$rotdamping <float|scale>- Rotational damping scale.
$drag <float|scale>- Scales air resistance.
Example
$collisionmodel "tree_deciduous_01a_physbox.smd"
{
$mass 350.0
$concave
}