I'm relatively new at Revit.
I tried multistory stairs. Is there a trick to getting the rails to connect at the floors?
Because I couldn't get that to work, and the fact that the stringers wouldn't extend past the riser lines, I thought I could just make one long stair (with landings on both sides) to go all the way up a 5 story office building, then just shorten the floor side landings and remove the end and side channels to get the connections to work the way they should. (see attached)
but now I cant get the wall rails to host properly on all the floors...they will just host on the lowest runs.
fix one thing, break another...
How do other people trick the stair tool into doing a normal interior fire exit stair FFS?
And am I right in my research that you cant have intermediate posts on the runs without doing all the math to make a pattern by hand? Or am I missing something?
Gelöst! Gehe zur Lösung
Gelöst von ToanDN. Gehe zur Lösung
@laura.d.morgan4.ctr wrote:
I'm relatively new at Revit.
I tried multistory stairs. Is there a trick to getting the rails to connect at the floors?
Because I couldn't get that to work, and the fact that the stringers wouldn't extend past the riser lines, I thought I could just make one long stair (with landings on both sides) to go all the way up a 5 story office building, then just shorten the floor side landings and remove the end and side channels to get the connections to work the way they should. (see attached)
but now I cant get the wall rails to host properly on all the floors...they will just host on the lowest runs.
Use Railing > Sketch Path > Pick New Host > Pick a Run (not the entire stairs)
fix one thing, break another...
How do other people trick the stair tool into doing a normal interior fire exit stair FFS?
And am I right in my research that you cant have intermediate posts on the runs without doing all the math to make a pattern by hand? Or am I missing something?
I model stairs and railings for design intent, not fabrication so I actually don't mind they are not continuous, but I do pay attention to where the transitions occur so they present cleanly in the drawings.
Thanks! You are always so helpful!
(Makes me feel like I'm not trying to learn in as much of a vacuum)
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