Einar wrote:
Yes, the multi-plane does that...
Unfortunately the moment the footprint becomes something else than a rectangle the top ridge point is un-movable? That is very inconveniant at such an early stage...but probably because of geometry constraints.
That is because it is really no longer a ridge.
It is a hip - bisecting the angle of the gutter (eave) lines of the adjoining roof planes.
I find using single roof planes can often be easier than using the multi-plane roof when odd shapes are involved.
Place the single plane pivot line and define the slope.
If you know the shape of the roof plane you can then model that - otherwise approximate it and use the roof edge adjust command to determine the hips and ridges.
i.e. with roof tool active, select one roof then CTRL click the edge on any other roof plane that you want to join to the selected roof.
Then select the other roof and CTRL click the adjoining edge on the first roof.
You can even place single roof planes in 3D if all you know is 3 height points for that roof plane.
It will create the pivot line at the correct position perpendicular to the roof pitch.
Barry.
One of the forum moderators.
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