Search and replace your text file, replace #QNAN with 0 and it should load up after that. QNAN is programmer geek for something like "Not A Number" - maybe out of range or infinity, etc.
Reading more, Im not sure that it is. These make no mention of its use: http://forums.cgsociety.org/search.php?searchid=3312439 "A #qnan is basically a number out of range, in my experiences, it means that a number is infinately small, so usually you can get away with replacing it with a 0." Oh well, at least I know what…
OK data recovered. I sent you mail with everything, but I also wanted to throw this out there for the Maya gurus (where for art thou Whargoul?) since I myself don't fully understand it. Something you are doing Maya doesn't like ( my only guess here is the really messy arrangement of stuff in the outliner could well have…
God damn I love Wikipedia.. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Not-a-number Quiet NaNs Quiet NaNs, or qNaNs, do not raise any additional exceptions as they propagate through most operations. The exceptions are where the NaN cannot simply be passed through unchanged to the output, such as in format conversions or certain…