In 2023 and before, we could add points and they could be different elevations and the contours would be calculated. In 2024, after adding boundaries, when adding points, if one point's elevation is changed, all the points change to the same elevation. What's going on? I can't set independent elevations for points on a toposolid. Does anyone know how? Must I import contours for this to work?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by dbroad. Go to Solution.
No. You can still add points and apply specific elevations to them. I'm not sure why this would be giving you an issue.
Thanks for your help.
It'll take some getting used to, as its a new feature, but the issues you're all having are just about learning how it works. There are some more fundamental issues with toposolids I hope they figure out, but none of these are those things.
i think the toposolid feature is painful. in Australia we work off the Australian Height Datum which is based on the mean sea level which we use as 0 elevation. with a toposurface i could import a cad file with z coordinates & create a toposurface easily or the alternative was to create by placing points across a contour pattern on the site plan. Either way it was efficient. I find now with the toposolid its far more complex than it needs be. So far in my experience with toposolid - if you were to cut into the toposolid for a building pad on a sloping site it seems to pick the average fall line and the building pad is cut out perpendicular to that plane. and it seems to be ineditable once included. Maybe its just me and having to get used to a new system but i think toposolid is not a worthwhile upgrade to Revit.
Not all steps about the toposlids were forward. Some were backwards, in my opinion. Hopefully this will be improved in future updates.
I did a video about this new topic. At the end of the video I assign a grade to each feature of toposolid, with my comments.
This is the link to the video: https://youtu.be/vNNszAef3mE?si=JlOsMu9vJco98Asa
Alfred, I appreciated the thoroughness of your video, and agree with your summary points. One of your requests, which has been echoed by many others, is for subdivisions with negative thickness - into the toposolid. I want to share that one can achieve what appears to be a negative subdivision by simply creating a subdivision of greater thickness for "everything else", shown in green in this screen capture. The toposolid only represents the dirt. Although it'd be great to have a "negative" subdivision, I'm willing to live with the existing system if it means improvements elsewhere - particularly in the editing mode as you also noted.
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