Currently if you model a door in the wall, then in a plan view, if you make the wall transparent so that you can see weld plates for the roof beams, you will see the door even though your view range is cut 100 feet above the door. The same thing is true with concrete columns that have beam pockets. Its like walls and columns completely ignore the view range controls. It makes me think that you always see the whole wall and whole column. This should not be the case! The walls should cut in plan with the view range settings the same way they do with a section where you use the "far clip offset" to adjust how much of the wall you see.
@Anonymous
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by RDAOU. Go to Solution.
have you try to use plan region and set the view range setting in that portion and see if helps. thanks
@ennujozlagam I must admit I have never used plan regions before so I was hopeful when I looked up the YouTube video of how they work. But unfortunately the plan region trick did not work. I just tried it and you can still see the door 109 feet below the view range cut. Check out the screen shot, I was able to get an elevation marker on the door as proof that its below the view range cut. Further evidence that this is something Autodesk needs to fix.
Please consider giving the original post a like so that we get the attention of Autodesk and hopefully this can be resolved in future installments of Revit.
@MostafaElashmawy
I just tried your suggestion to no avail. Its not an underlay issue. Good suggestion though.
Exceptions for the display of elements intersected by the cut plane include the following:
Walls shorter than 6 feet (or 2 meters) are not cut, even if they intersect the cut plane.
The 6 feet (or 2 meters) are measured from the top of the bounding box to the bottom of the primary view range. For example, if you create a wall whose top is 6 feet above the bottom clip plane, the wall is cut at the cut plane. When the top of the wall is less than 6 feet, the entire wall shows as projection even where it intersects the cut plane. This behavior always occurs when the Top Constraint property for the wall is specified as Unconnected. If the top constraint property of the wall is specified as Connected, then the cut plane position is always used to define if the wall is cut or projected.
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Hosam Elzohry , ACI , ACP, Autodesk Ambassador Gold
BIM Manager
That's good to know and in fact I think I knew this already. The walls that I'm talking about are 200' tall and the top is constrained to a level so your suggestion does not apply in this case. Also I'm specifically talking about when you set the wall as transparent. I set the wall transparent to see embed plates below the floor, I only want to see about 6 feet below the floor plan and Revit shows a door that is 200' feet below the floor plan. So yeah this still has no solution and needs to be addressed by the developers.
The case you are experiencing is related to the fact that the wall is not cut by the view range cut plane...it is being displayed as a projection because its top extent falls within the view depth; therefore when you are applying transparency, you are seeing all imbedded elements including doors.
In order to generate the view you want you have three options:
YOUTUBE | BIM | COMPUTATIONAL DESIGN | PARAMETRIC DESIGN | GENERATIVE DESIGN | VISUAL PROGRAMMING
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