Great tutorial,BTW, for the slope of the slab if, you put a negative value it will slope the way you want it, so you don't have to rotate the slab
Check under Element Properties – Level of Tail – “Top of Slab” may have caused the error? I have not done this so . . .
I forgot to respond to Juans comment. I went back and tried his approach and it does work.So use a negative slope if you run into the problem I did. I will look further into this to find out exactly why a negative slope is used.
Hey, cheers for the tutorial.I'm not certain if it's a convention in the US but in UK/Ireland normally a slope arrow points up the slope and not down. This might be why Revit is doing the reverse of what you thought it would.Thanks again for the great tutorials!
Post a Comment
4 comments:
Great tutorial,
BTW, for the slope of the slab if, you put a negative value it will slope the way you want it, so you don't have to rotate the slab
Check under Element Properties – Level of Tail – “Top of Slab” may have caused the error? I have not done this so . . .
I forgot to respond to Juans comment. I went back and tried his approach and it does work.
So use a negative slope if you run into the problem I did. I will look further into this to find out exactly why a negative slope is used.
Hey, cheers for the tutorial.
I'm not certain if it's a convention in the US but in UK/Ireland normally a slope arrow points up the slope and not down. This might be why Revit is doing the reverse of what you thought it would.
Thanks again for the great tutorials!
Post a Comment