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radius of a existing wall

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Message 1 of 8
Anonymous
743 Views, 7 Replies

radius of a existing wall

(New To CAD) How do I fine the radius of these walls? See SS attach. I try the MEASUREGEOM (Command) but the radius tool is looking for a circle type item. I also try the PTYPE (Command). RADIUS.jpg

7 REPLIES 7
Message 2 of 8
Alfred.NESWADBA
in reply to: Anonymous

Hi,

 

if you don't have an arc or circle at that position (hard to say just from the screenshot) you might try

  • create a circle with option 3 points
  • select the best fitting points for that circle
  • then you can use _MEASURE to get a radius

 

- alfred -

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alfred NESWADBA
ISH-Solutions GmbH / Ingenieur Studio HOLLAUS
www.ish-solutions.at ... blog.ish-solutions.at ... LinkedIn ... CDay 2025
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(not an Autodesk consultant)
Message 3 of 8
scot-65
in reply to: Anonymous

Another method is to use a single 2-point polyline
from say, sp2 to sp6. From there enable grips by
selecting the polyline, hover the midpoint grip
and a cursor tip is displayed.
Select "Convert to Arc" and point to sp4.
Radius dimension to finish.

And welcome to these forums.

???

Scot-65
A gift of extraordinary Common Sense does not require an Acronym Suffix to be added to my given name.


Message 4 of 8
Anonymous
in reply to: scot-65

Thank you, so it would look something like this? see SS

RADIUS.jpg

Message 5 of 8
Kent1Cooper
in reply to: scot-65


@scot-65 wrote:
Another method is to use a single 2-point polyline
from say, sp2 to sp6. ....

 

I would not do it that way.  I would draw either a Circle using the 3Point option [suggested by @Alfred.NESWADBA in Message 2], or a simple 3-point Arc, in either case using the same appropriate location on each of sp2, sp4 and sp6 elements [whatever they are, assuming you can Osnap to something the same on each].  The huge advantage of an Arc or Circle is that you can just pick on it and the Properties palette or QuickProperties, or if you like a LIST command, will tell you its radius, which they can't do for a Polyline arc segment.

Kent Cooper, AIA
Message 6 of 8
Kent1Cooper
in reply to: Anonymous


@Anonymous wrote:

.... it would look something like this? ....


 

Like this:

ArcColumns.PNG

whether you do it as an Arc or a Circle or a Polyline.  Get the radius [by whatever means you choose] of the yellow Arc.  In this case, that's an Arc object, Osnapped to the MIDpoints of the inboard flanges of the outermost and middle columns.  If the columns are accurately drawn, any three of them would do.  Depending on what you mean by the radius of the wall, you may prefer the midpoints of the outboard  flanges instead, or the centers of gravity of the columns [which could be their insertion points if they're Blocks].

Kent Cooper, AIA
Message 7 of 8
imadHabash
in reply to: Anonymous

Hi and Welcome to AutoCAD Forum,

>> I try the MEASUREGEOM (Command) but the radius tool is looking for a circle type item.

Yes .. that's logic . since you asked for a Radius info then arc or circle must be exist . 

>> I also try the PTYPE (Command). 

 It has nothing to do with this command . !! 

 

To get the radius for existing wall , you have to draw Arc or circle over your existing lines . start ARC command from menu bar above ( see below image ) and select the option that meet your needs . 

 

arcs.png 

 

Regards,

 

 

 

Imad Habash

EESignature

Message 8 of 8
dbroad
in reply to: Anonymous

What makes you think the wall has a single center point?  The only way to be sure is to draw radial lines through each of the column web axes. If they don't intersect at a common point, you don't have a single radius arrangement.  The other solutions proposed should be sufficient to give you an approximate radius.

Architect, Registered NC, VA, SC, & GA.

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