rgarand wrote:
here is a picture showing 2 sections thru the different areas. I do notice that I see the soffit in one...but not the other. If you notice in the plan view...I have selected the soffit, it DOES go the entire length of the eave. This seems to be a display problem maybe.
Hi Robert,
Well, I’m taking Thomas’ suggestion and typing in Word so as not to lose my message again.
😉
Finally a free moment, but you’ve no doubt left this issue in the dust and are on to bigger and better things!
Anyway, since you’re new to AC, let me throw out a whole bunch of things, some of which may help. The problem that is shown in your drawings is the reason you posted, but I think the
design intent
for the soffit is the place to start.
I can’t tell from the thin roof slab what your structure and intent is. But, assuming that Section 9 is the look you’re after, then there are several things to look at. First, the soffit mass is occupying the same space as the exterior wall. (Section 8 shows that exterior wall as having been trimmed to the roof.)
You generally do not want to have two elements occupy the same space for a bunch of obvious reasons, and some less obvious ones (related to some external rendering applications).
If you want your wall plate height to be at the bottom of the soffit (well, top of soffit sheating) – assuming that the soffit is covering up a truss heel for example, then you need to model your wall that way. If your roof is raftered, then your soffit will not penetrate the exterior wall, but will abut it and you should model
that
way.
There’s a problem with modeling a soffit with a wall as opposed to a slab. A wall must have its thickness explicitly specified. You have to dimension your plan to figure this out. Let’s not work that hard. By using slab, with rectangular geometry selected, you just drag/draw from (say) the upper left exterior wall corner to the upper right roof drip edge and the width is taken care of for you. (Works in this case anyway since you have a plumb cut drip edge.) If you stretch the roof overhang, then you just stretch the soffit slab…either individually via the pet palette – or stretch both together with the stretch command. If the soffit were a wall and you stretched the overhang, the wall width would stay constant – walls only stretch in length.
Once you think of the soffit as a slab, then you have a choice of it being a mass – as you did with the wall – or of being just the soffit sheathing – setting you up for wall section details. The appearance of the rake at the gable end determines other choices in all of this.
By the way, to trim a slab to a roof, you need to use solid element operations. If you use trim-to-roof, the slab will be plumb cut at the intersection point with the roof – not how you want the soffit to look. With solid ops, subtract the roof from the slab and it will be properly beveled.
I’m guessing that your original problem is related to having used a wall for the soffit. Because the wall does not show in Section 10, I have to guess that you trimmed to roof, but also that your wall edge and the roof drip edge did not coincide, causing the wall to be trimmed as in Section 9 where the wall was inside the drip edge, and causing the wall to disappear entirely in Section 10 where the wall reference line was (minutely) outside the drip edge. A minute difference, as Bruce mentions, is all that has to exist. It is possible the the roof reference line is not precisely at 0 degrees … did you hold the shift key down while drawing it? Ditto soffit wall. Not really sure though. Mystery.
I am also having trouble on another elev view with 1/2 of my gable wall not showing...yet my windows in the missing half of the gable end are showing.
This sounds like a trim-to-roof problem – do you have a lower roof that butts into your gable end wall? Guessing so. Click the gable end wall in plan, ctrl-T properties, and click the button to undo trim to roof. In 3D, click the wall, and the roof that it should be trimmed to – making that be the
only
roof that will trim the wall. Then right-mouse and trim to roof (top). Better?
HTH,
Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier • macOS Sonoma 14.7.1, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB