patricks
2013-04-17, 02:00 PM
In the attached image and Revit file, I made a rail for a short stair and landing between two different building floor levels. Instead of sketching the rail path line from nose-to-nose of the top and bottom risers, I moved the line up 1 1/2" to get the bottom baluster post off the edge of the concrete step, since you can't core drill at the edge in the field, obviously.
However despite the path sketch line breaking 1 1/2" past the top edge of the top riser, it still puts a post right at the edge - I guess because it's hosted to the stair and the Corner Balusters are set to have 0" Space (Start and End posts have 3/4" space since they're 1 1/2" diameter posts).
So if I change the corner post setting, then the post at the other corner of the landing will be out of place.
I don't see why it has to put a "corner" post at every slope change of the railing. That's not how railings are built in real life. Posts go where they need to structurally, independent of where the slope of the rail changes based on the step/landing configuration.
However despite the path sketch line breaking 1 1/2" past the top edge of the top riser, it still puts a post right at the edge - I guess because it's hosted to the stair and the Corner Balusters are set to have 0" Space (Start and End posts have 3/4" space since they're 1 1/2" diameter posts).
So if I change the corner post setting, then the post at the other corner of the landing will be out of place.
I don't see why it has to put a "corner" post at every slope change of the railing. That's not how railings are built in real life. Posts go where they need to structurally, independent of where the slope of the rail changes based on the step/landing configuration.