Lucas Krech Posted November 18, 2010 Share Posted November 18, 2010 I am trying to draw a wall that is curved in plan view and also has a slope in its run from SR to SL from 12'6 to 18'. Obviously I could loft NURBS curves to create the basic shape, but it has several doors that would be easier to use plug-in objects for rather than cutting holes in a NURBS and lining up doors to fit the holes. So far I can make a linear rise quite easily, but not a sloping cured rise as it wants to be. Suggeastions? Quote Link to comment
michaelk Posted November 19, 2010 Share Posted November 19, 2010 You should be able to use the 3D reshape tool. If you have Architect you can also use the "Fit walls to roof" command. Put the deck on a different layer and run the command with "constrain bottom of walls to 3D geometry" checked and the layer selected. hth mk Quote Link to comment
JBenghiat Posted November 19, 2010 Share Posted November 19, 2010 Hi Lucas, If the slope is constant along the circumference of the wall, just switch to a front view and use the selection tool to pull one corner up or down. Use the floating data bar (Drag+tab) to get an accurate height. If you want a constant slope from SR to SL, so that in front view the profile is linear, you need a couple more steps. Add your doors to your curved wall first. Next, switch to front view and create an extrude that completely covers the part of the wall you want to cut away at an angle. Switch to top view, and make sure your extrude covers the plan area of your wall. Next perform a solid subtraction with your wall and the extrude. Your door holes will remain in the resulting solid subtraction. -Josh Quote Link to comment
Lucas Krech Posted November 19, 2010 Author Share Posted November 19, 2010 Thanks Josh! Only drawback is that operation converts the wall to a solid subtraction. However the same process using the "Wall Recess Tool" creates the same effect while maintaining the wall as a wall. @Michael, There is no roof and it is a curved rise not a linear slope, but thanks for he suggestions. Quote Link to comment
bcd Posted November 20, 2010 Share Posted November 20, 2010 Surprisingly, you don't need a roof for the Fit to Roof command to work, just some 3d geometry, best on a separate layer, in the correct location. Quote Link to comment
Lucas Krech Posted November 20, 2010 Author Share Posted November 20, 2010 I'd prefer a solution that did not necessitate making a nullset layer or class. But good to know! Quote Link to comment
Cris with no H Posted November 23, 2010 Share Posted November 23, 2010 Lucas, I have to agree with the Fit Walls To Roof command workflow here. It is FAR easier to create some temporary 3D geometry, tell the walls to fit to it, then delete the geometry than to go to the shenanigans involved in the other tactics mentioned. I don't even want to go into the possible problems you set up for yourself using the Wall Recess like you did. Quote Link to comment
Lucas Krech Posted December 8, 2010 Author Share Posted December 8, 2010 FTR, used the Fit to Walls and it was far more effective than the wall recess tool. Took a few tries to realize the geometry being fit to had to be on a separate layer with nothing else on it. Thanks for the help! Quote Link to comment
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