arlene Posted December 29, 2014 Posted December 29, 2014 I am receiving error message "surfaces do not overlap" when i try to get volume between two surfaces.. i have two surfaces: 1. Made up of Survey points 2. Polyline which i put an elevation to make it 3d poly and then convert it into block before making it a surface. What could have I done wrong? Help me please Quote
Cad64 Posted December 29, 2014 Posted December 29, 2014 I have moved your question to the Civil 3D section: http://www.cadtutor.net/forum/forumdisplay.php?57-Civil-3D-amp-LDD Quote
rkmcswain Posted December 29, 2014 Posted December 29, 2014 Generally speaking, if the surfaces do not overlap, then it cannot compute a volume. Can you post the drawing (if not here, then maybe on Dropbox or something like that)? Quote
BIGAL Posted December 29, 2014 Posted December 29, 2014 You may need a boundary to clip surface that basicly limits the area the volume will be calculated within it must fit within both surfaces. If you have a flat plane as second surface as it sounds like to me just add 4 points with height well outside volume area to the surface. You only really need 5 points to make a surface (4 outside 1 in middle) if you want a volume to a flat plane. Quote
rkmcswain Posted December 30, 2014 Posted December 30, 2014 You only really need 5 points to make a surface (4 outside 1 in middle) if you want a volume to a flat plane. Why 5? 4 or even 3 could do it. Which reminds me, Carlson has always had a nice feature where you could calc a volume between any surface and a flat elevation, withOUT having to make a surface for the flat elevation. Very useful. Quote
BIGAL Posted December 31, 2014 Posted December 31, 2014 3 pts min is correct pretty sure old version of civ3d asked for 5, side note our 3rd party software allows for volumes by slices handy for water volume calcs or part full volumes. Quote
rkmcswain Posted December 31, 2014 Posted December 31, 2014 I just draw a rectangle, move it up (in the Z direction) to the correct elevation and add this to a new surface as a breakline. Quote
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