Angled Shower Wall Issue - Wall Intersection Cleanup


JKEdmo
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Hello,

 

I have a shower stall with a corner glass door as shown.

 

Two of the walls are pony interior stud walls for the curb with shower glass walls above (centered).

 

The bottom plumbing wall is a full height stud wall.

 

Having issues with the wall merge circled below.  I tried "edit wall layer intersections" unsuccessfully.   Any hints or tips?

 

Thanks once again for your help,

 

Jim

 

 

 

image.thumb.png.9b86943ace95d851b0c53f196e59141b.png

 

image.thumb.png.83944b3da8a68b2e23de59c10e06b0fc.png

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  On 11/13/2022 at 8:10 PM, JKEdmo said:

shower stall with a corner glass door as shown

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Very finicky point, esp. with Chiefs pony walls.  You'll have to turn that plumbing wall to meet the pony wall.  I put in a room divider wall to locate the glass pony, then turned the shower wall angled to match.  As you can see I only could do about 4" min. before it reverts back to how you had originally.   

SHOWER WALL 1.png

SHOWER WALL.png

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  On 11/13/2022 at 9:24 PM, JKEdmo said:

(I believe the answer is no...)

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Not that I know of. When this happens to me I adjust the door to the corner (giving enough space between the edge of the door and wall corner helps, if you can afford it. In terms of plan view appearance you can add 2D closed polylines with a fill to cover up plan view visual anomalies. 

The software has built in limits past which one cannot get by and so it is incumbent on the end user to find something that does work at all times. Given the will, there usually is a solution you can gain.

 

DJP

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  On 11/13/2022 at 11:18 PM, DavidJPotter said:

Not that I know of. When this happens to me I adjust the door to the corner (giving enough space between the edge of the door and wall corner helps, if you can afford it. In terms of plan view appearance you can add 2D closed polylines with a fill to cover up plan view visual anomalies. 

The software has built in limits past which one cannot get by and so it is incumbent on the end user to find something that does work at all times. Given the will, there usually is a solution you can gain.

 

DJP

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Thanks. You're right -- a big part of learning the software is learning its limits, then learning the workarounds.

 

Jim

 

 

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