2007-02-08 05:38 PM - last edited on 2023-05-23 05:11 PM by Rubia Torres
2007-02-08 07:52 PM
2007-02-09 01:32 AM
2007-02-09 03:06 AM
laszlonagy wrote:Unfortunately inclined beams dont mitre in the vertical plane (retain vertical end face). SEO can be used to clean up the join but is messy as a number of operations are required
Create a Complex Beam.
Beams can be inclined in ArchiCAD 10. Hopefully that is the version you are using.
2007-02-09 10:11 AM
Aussie wrote:The coping shown should miter at equal angles (as the beams do automatically) not vertically. This is not like a cornice to rake miter that does require a vertical miter (with SEOs and custom profiles to make a proper joint). It would seem strange to have a different coping profile for the sloping part that would be required for the vertical joint.laszlonagy wrote:Unfortunately inclined beams dont mitre in the vertical plane (retain vertical end face). SEO can be used to clean up the join but is messy as a number of operations are required
Create a Complex Beam.
Beams can be inclined in ArchiCAD 10. Hopefully that is the version you are using.
2007-02-10 12:49 AM
Matthew wrote:I wasnt suggesting that the beams join along a vertical plane but that mitres dont work in the Z direction as distinct from the x/y planeAussie wrote:The coping shown should miter at equal angles (as the beams do automatically) not vertically. This is not like a cornice to rake miter that does require a vertical miter (with SEOs and custom profiles to make a proper joint). It would seem strange to have a different coping profile for the sloping part that would be required for the vertical joint.laszlonagy wrote:Unfortunately inclined beams dont mitre in the vertical plane (retain vertical end face). SEO can be used to clean up the join but is messy as a number of operations are required
Create a Complex Beam.
Beams can be inclined in ArchiCAD 10. Hopefully that is the version you are using.
2007-02-10 12:49 AM
2007-02-10 02:36 AM
Aussie wrote:Unless I am not understanding you, I have found that angled beams do miter in x/y/z correctly as long as the profile is appropriate to the function. It's just conditions like classical rake/cornice joints that require special attention.Matthew wrote:I wasnt suggesting that the beams join along a vertical plane but that mitres dont work in the Z direction as distinct from the x/y planeAussie wrote:The coping shown should miter at equal angles (as the beams do automatically) not vertically. This is not like a cornice to rake miter that does require a vertical miter (with SEOs and custom profiles to make a proper joint). It would seem strange to have a different coping profile for the sloping part that would be required for the vertical joint.
Unfortunately inclined beams dont mitre in the vertical plane (retain vertical end face). SEO can be used to clean up the join but is messy as a number of operations are required
2007-02-10 03:17 AM
Matthew wrote:hmmmm. I must be missing something as the ends of the beams are always vertical for me.
Unless I am not understanding you, I have found that angled beams do miter in x/y/z correctly as long as the profile is appropriate to the function. It's just conditions like classical rake/cornice joints that require special attention.
2007-02-10 03:25 AM