I am new to advance steel (2019) and usually figure things out pretty well but this has me stumped. How can i change the top of steel elevation once I have drawn in my beam?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by AleckGiles. Go to Solution.
Think you need to set your level symbol at the model origin, then you can set a relative level value.
See help page :
Cheers
John Bennett
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.
Hi, are you talking about the actual top of steel level in the model or the view direction of the beam in a 2D drawing?
You can enter a Z value to move the beam, but I would advise against it as the system line remains where it is.
Hi,
what you can do is to set the insert position as default.
Look at Sebastian Eiches post (Message 66 Page 3 of Sebastian Eiche's great tipp).
You create a new beam, select the positioning tab, right click into the dialog, a windows opens with values "use default", "positioning", "mirrored", "y", "x". The values you check will be used for the creation of future beams. So if you select UpperMiddle as position and check "positioning" you should get the insert type you want.
HTH,
Christian Blei
HI,
If you are drawing the beam at the ground level what is wrong with simply using the Move command to move the beam up the required height. That is what you should do. The system line reference point in the Top Middle is good for horizontal floor beams and such. Never set a Y or Z offset as these move the beam away form the system line. The system line is the datum for all dimensioning. Your drawing will be nonsense if you do that. (At least in the UK build).
If all your beams need to be at a level nowhere near zero then instead of modelling everything miles away form zero, model at ground level and set a datum by placing a Level Symbol in the model and adjusting the Datum value as required. Your model is always best near the WCS origin. the Level symbol datum will be shared by all Level type dimensions and level symbols in the drawings.
Aleck Giles, Structures Consultant, Graitec
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.
Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.