!Restored: Flaw in stair logic
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‎2008-06-15
07:35 AM
- last edited on
‎2023-05-25
04:57 PM
by
Rubia Torres
In this post I've attached an image showing a stair that does not have a nosing overhang:
- the 3D matches the 2D; and
- the handrail is the correct height above the nosing of the stair (as stipulated by regulatory requirements).
In the subsequent post I will attach an image of the same stair with a 30 nosing overhang:
- the 3D no longer matches the 2D; and
- the handrail is no longer the correct height above the stair nosing.
These problems occur because the 3D of the stair is being generated by the outside face of the riser rather than the front edge of the tread. The nosing overhang is being added to the front edge of the tread instead of at the back where it should be, with the riser face moving back by the distance of the nosing overhang.
In the real world stairs are set out by their treads, not the risers, and the locations of all of the other elements of the stair is determined relative to where the treads are located.
I'm really surprised that a program as mature as Archicad 11 contains such a fundamental flaw in its logic. It is not reassuring.
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‎2008-06-30 09:53 PM
http://www.encina.co.uk/objective.html

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‎2008-06-30 11:07 PM
you can't build a line
Mac Studio
iPad Pro
iPhone

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‎2008-07-03 05:38 PM
william235711 wrote:
Steve,
I agree with you and I do it all of the time in BOA but Archicad has serious limitations when modeling in its 3-d window. As one of the plug-in writers has pointed out, you cannot easily rotate anything in 3-d. It's too cumbersome and time consuming.
Archicad needs to improve its 3d capabilities or make the plug-in, I forget the name of the product and the company, part of the package.
What is BOA ?
Stair parts are easy to model with ArchiCAD. What part of the stair would you model in ArchiCAD if it were not so difficult?
Can you show a picture of it?
Something like this model?
ArchiCAD 25 7000 USA - Windows 10 Pro 64x - Dell 7720 64 GB 2400MHz ECC - Xeon E3 1535M v6 4.20GHz - (2) 1TB M.2 PCIe Class 50 SSD's - 17.3" UHD IPS (3840x2160) - Nvidia Quadro P5000 16GB GDDR5 - Maxwell Studio/Render 5.2.1.49- Multilight 2 - Adobe Acrobat Pro - ArchiCAD 6 -25

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‎2008-07-03 08:08 PM
Steve wrote:BOA (now dead) was the heir of Architrion, one of the first 3D CAD programs for personal computers (nee ca 1986, French, Mac only). Google for BOA CAD.
What is BOA ?
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‎2008-09-25 01:13 AM
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‎2008-09-26 07:47 AM
- How the problem had never been picked up before.
- Why, when its been pointed out to them, that it hasn't been fixed.
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‎2008-09-26 06:30 PM
Here in Greece it's quite common to use a 270degree staircase with no landings, so it's one continuous flight of steps. Needless to say, I have yet to manage to model that kind of staircase in ArchiCad. There is no predefined model for such a type and even if i manually draw it and try creating it from a polyline, it wont allow me to. The only chance i ve had is to join 2 staircases together but that just looks tacky.
Sorry to hijack your thread, just thought i'd post this here since it's staircase problems you're talking about.

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‎2008-09-26 06:46 PM
konnos wrote:I don't see your problem. This took 5 minutes, with (almost) default settings. Stair spiral 12 from the library and a Stairmaker stair created from scratch.
Here in Greece it's quite common to use a 270degree staircase with no landings, so it's one continuous flight of steps. Needless to say, I have yet to manage to model that kind of staircase in ArchiCad. There is no predefined model for such a type and even if i manually draw it and try creating it from a polyline, it wont allow me to. The only chance i ve had is to join 2 staircases together but that just looks tacky.
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‎2008-09-26 06:53 PM
I used the command
It won't let me put it in my plan, as it's saying "try decreasing nosing or extend the winder range". Changing nosings in that menu does not do anything. I m just convinced that ArchiCAD cannot automatically do the staircase i want. I m sure gdl knowledge will come to use for such things, but i don't feel like digging so deep into programming
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‎2008-09-27 03:46 AM
It's really bad at what we call winders.
It won't let me build double winder stairs I know are legal (to strict International Building Codes standards), giving me the same old dumb line you get:"try decreasing nosing or extend the winder range" which is feces.
I know damn well what I can build LEGALLY.
Yet it would tell me that the stair in image below is OK. Ha!
Bier