Manual Land Desktop 2009
Manual Land Desktop 2009
Manual Land Desktop 2009
Getting Started
2009
April 2008
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Contents
Chapter 1
Introduction .
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AutoCAD Land Desktop . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Installation Wizard . . . . . . . . . . . . . Installing on a Single Computer . . . . . . . . . Installing on a Network . . . . . . . . . . . First Things to Know . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Projects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Prototypes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Templates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Setup Profiles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . How to Use the Documentation Set . . . . . . . . . Recommendations for New Users . . . . . . . . Path Naming Conventions . . . . . . . . . . Finding Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Accessing Help . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Help Navigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Concepts, Procedures, and Reference Information in Help Using the Tutorial . . . . . . . . . . . . . Using this Getting Started Guide . . . . . . . .
Chapter 2
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Starting AutoCAD Land Desktop . . . . . . . The AutoCAD Land Desktop Drawing Environment .
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Accessing AutoCAD Land Desktop Commands . . . . . . . . Toolbars. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transparent Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . Establishing Settings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . User Preferences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Drawing Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Prototype Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Data File Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Using the World Coordinate System for Creating Data . . . . Working with Projects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Creating Projects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Managing Projects with the Project Management Dialog Box . . Managing Prototypes with the Prototype Management Dialog Box Working with Drawings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Creating New Drawings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Setting Up Drawings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Opening Drawings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Opening Drawings in Other Types of AutoCAD . . . . . . Exiting AutoCAD Land Desktop . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Chapter 3
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Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Point Markers and Labels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Points and CAD Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Working with the Project Point Database . . . . . . . . . . 36 Setting Up the Point Database . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Establishing Point Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Changing the Point Creation Settings . . . . . . . . . 39 Changing the Point Marker and Point Text Settings . . . . . 40 Creating Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Importing Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Using Point Filters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Editing Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Point Synchronization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Working with Point Groups . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Working with Description Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Creating a Utility Pole Description Key . . . . . . . . . 54 Performing Geodetic Transformations on Points . . . . . . . . 57 Calculating State Plane Coordinates from a Known Latitude and Longitude . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Chapter 4
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Using Point, DEM, Contour, Breakline, and Boundary Data in Surfaces 64 Working with the Terrain Model Explorer . . . . . . . . . . 65 Creating Surface Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Creating Breaklines to Use in Surface Generation . . . . . . 67 Creating Contours to Use in Surface Generation . . . . . . 68 Creating Boundaries to Use in Surface Generation . . . . . . 69 Building Surfaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Creating Finished Ground Data for Surfaces . . . . . . . . . . 73 Editing Surfaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 Edit History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 Creating Contours . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 Creating Contours from a Surface . . . . . . . . . . . 76 Calculating Volumes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Chapter 5
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Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . Working with Alignments . . . . . . Multi-User Alignment Database . . . Drawing Alignment Geometry . . . Defining an Object as a Road Alignment Making an Alignment Current . . . Editing a Road Alignment. . . . . Drafting Road Results . . . . . . Working with Parcels . . . . . . . . Drawing Parcel Geometry . . . . . Defining Parcels to the Parcel Database Managing Parcels . . . . . . .
Chapter 6
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Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . Listing Object Data. . . . . . . . . . . CAD-Based Inquiry Commands . . . . . AutoCAD Land Desktop Inquiry Commands. Labeling Objects . . . . . . . . . . . Label Styles . . . . . . . . . . . Editing Label Styles . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 7
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Chapter 9
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Overview of Grading . . . . . . . . . . . . Finished Ground Data . . . . . . . . . . Using Grading Objects and Daylighting Commands . . Creating a Grading Object . . . . . . . . . . . Editing a Grading Object . . . . . . . . . . . Creating Contours and Surface Data from a Grading Object Creating a Grading Plan Using Daylighting Commands . Working with Ponds . . . . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 10
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Hydrology and Hydraulics . . . . . . Sample Hydrology Files . . . . . Gathering Data for Hydrologic Analysis . Using the Hydrology Calculators . . . . Calculating Runoff . . . . . . . . Using the Hydraulic Structure Calculators . Routing Ponds . . . . . . . . .
Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Viewing and Editing Roads in Profile View . . . . . . . Storage Location of Alignment and Profile Data . . . . Changing the Profile Settings . . . . . . . . . . . . Sampling the Existing Ground to Create Profile Data . . . . Sampling the Existing Ground Profile Data from a Surface . Creating Existing Ground Profiles . . . . . . . . . . Creating Finished Ground Profiles . . . . . . . . . . Superimposing Vertical Alignment Data . . . . . . . .
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Editing Vertical Alignments . . . . . . . . . . Vertical Curve Calculator . . . . . . . . . Editing Vertical Alignments Graphically . . . . Generating Reports From Vertical Alignment Data . Calculating Vertical Curve Length . . . . . . . .
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Chapter 13
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Viewing and Editing Roads in Section View . . . . . . Cross Section Database Files . . . . . . . . . Creating Existing Ground Cross Sections . . . . . . . Working with Templates . . . . . . . . . . . . Drawing Templates . . . . . . . . . . . . Defining Templates. . . . . . . . . . . . Editing Templates . . . . . . . . . . . . Working with Subassemblies . . . . . . . . . Creating Finished Ground Cross Sections . . . . . . Applying Templates to Existing Ground Cross Sections Modifying Roadway Slope . . . . . . . . . Viewing and Editing Sections . . . . . . . . . . Transitioning a Roadway . . . . . . . . . . . . Superelevating a Roadway . . . . . . . . . . . Creating Surfaces and 3D Data from Road Design Data . .
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Overview of Designing Pipe Runs . . . . Drawing and Defining Conceptual Pipe Runs Drafting Conceptual Pipe Runs in Profile View Editing Pipe Runs Graphically . . . . . Working with the Pipes Run Editor . . . Drafting Finished Pipe Runs in Plan View . Drafting Finished Pipe Runs in Profile View .
Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 18
Entering Observations .
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Entering Survey Data . . . . . . . . . . The Survey Observation Database . . . . . . Entering Observed Data . . . . . . . . . Using a Data Collector . . . . . . . . Using the Menu Commands . . . . . . Using the Survey Command Line. . . . . Using the Traverse and Sideshot Editors . . . . Inputting Sideshots using the Sideshot Editor .
Chapter 19
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viii
Contents
Introduction
1
In this chapter
AutoCAD Land Desktop The Installation Wizard First things to know How to use the
AutoCAD Land Desktop is based on AutoCAD and some components of AutoCAD Map 3D. Using AutoCAD Land Desktop, you can create, maintain, output, and analyze all the data in your land development projects. This Getting Started guide contains information for both AutoCAD Land Desktop 2009 and AutoCAD Civil 3D Land Desktop Companion 2009. For both products, you can refer to chapters 1 through 7 of this guide for information on the basic Land Desktop product features. If you have AutoCAD Civil 3D Land Desktop Companion 2009 installed, then you automatically have the civil engineering and survey tool features built into your product. Chapters 8 through 19 of this guide contain information on the civil engineering and surveying tools that are available with the AutoCAD Civil 3D Land Desktop Companion 2009 product.
documentation set
Finding information
Installing on a Network
If you need more extensive information about deploying AutoCAD Land Desktop on a network, consult the Network Administrator's Guide. To access this guide, in the Installation Wizard, click the Create Deployments link, then click the Documentation link.
Chapter 1
Introduction
Projects
The project is a basic unit of AutoCAD Land Desktop. It is a directory structure that contains all the data and settings relevant in designing a job. Data includes points, surfaces, drawings, and any other data created or referenced in your work. Drawings within a single project might illustrate separate aspects of the design yet share a common database and use common styles. When you install AutoCAD Land Desktop, a project folder (c:\Land Projects <Version Number>, by default) is created. Each time you create a project, a subfolder named <project name> is created within the project folder. For example, if you create a project named 97201, then AutoCAD Land Desktop creates the following folder: c:\Land Projects <Version Number>\97201 AutoCAD Land Desktop requires that drawings be associated with projects so that it has a location in which to store its external files. When you start a new drawing, you are prompted to select a project for the drawing. You can either create a new project or assign the drawing to an existing project. The drawing remains associated with that project as long as the project exists in the current Project Path. If you delete the project or if you change the project path, then you are prompted to select a project the next time you open the drawing. You can also associate an existing drawing (already assigned to a project) with a different project by using the Reassociate Drawing command.
Note If you open a drawing, or create a new drawing, without using the
AutoCAD Land Desktop versions of the New and Open commands, you are prompted to select a project with which to associate the drawing. If you decline to select a project, then AutoCAD Land Desktop automatically creates a project called _scratch and links the drawing to it. When you create a new project, you must specify a name and a prototype (default settings for new drawings that are associated with the project) for the project. You can also add a description of the project and any keywords that help you identify the project. When you are searching for a project, you can filter the list of projects based on the keywords to find a particular project.
Tip Although it is not required, we suggest that you save the drawings in the \dwg subfolder that is created in the project folder. This keeps the drawing and the project files together for easier archiving.
Prototypes
Prototypes provide a convenient way for you to maintain standard settings for the drawings. After you set up the drawing settings by using the Drawing Settings command on the Projects menu, you can save them back to a prototype. When you create a new project, you can select a prototype to use for the default settings for new drawing creation. At first, prototypes may seem similar to templates. However, each serves a distinct purpose:
Templates are comprised of drawing setup values that control the elements of a drawing. These might include standard layers, text styles, line types, dimension styles, and AutoCAD variables like Aperture. They can also store blocks, such as a border or a company logo. For more information, see the following section, Templates. Prototypes store settings that determine how AutoCAD Land Desktop behaves. For instance, a prototype might control point settings, output settings, and standard point groups.
When you install AutoCAD Land Desktop, a root prototype folder (C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Autodesk\AutoCAD Land Desktop <Version Number>\<Release Number>\Data\Prototypes) is created. Each prototype is represented by a subfolder of this root prototype folder. For example, if you create a prototype named MYPROTO, then AutoCAD Land Desktop creates the following folder: C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Autodesk\AutoCAD Land Desktop <Version Number>\<Release Number>\Data\Prototypes\myproto AutoCAD Land Desktop always maintains default prototypes, one for feet and the other for meters. If you delete these prototypes, then they are recreated, using the default system settings, the next time you start AutoCAD Land Desktop. For more information about prototype settings, see Prototype Settings on page 22.
Chapter 1
Introduction
Tip When you base a new project on a prototype, the entire prototype folder
is copied to the new project folder. You may want to store commonly-used files in a prototype folder so they are automatically copied to new projects.
Templates
When you create a new drawing, you can base it on a drawing template. A drawing template is a drawing file with pre-established settings for new drawings and has the extension .dwt. For example, you can set up all standard layers in a drawing and save the drawing as a .dwt file. If you base a new drawing on this template, then the new drawing is created with all the standard layers. Templates also store text styles, line types, dimension styles, and AutoCAD variables like Aperture. They can also store blocks, such as a border or a company logo. A template also stores drawing setup values. For example, if you use the Drawing Setup wizard or the Drawing Setup command to set up a drawing, and then you save that drawing as a .dwt file, then the next time you create a new drawing based on the drawing template, all the drawing setup values are added.
Setup Profiles
Each new drawing can have different units, scale, zone, orientation, text style, sheet size, and border settings. These settings are collectively known as a setup profile. Several setup profiles are included with AutoCAD Land Desktop. You can load one of these profiles, or you can customize a setup profile by using the Drawing Setup wizard or the Drawing Setup command. You have three options for drawing setup:
The Drawing Setup wizard guides you through the setup process by using tips and context-sensitive help that describe each option on each page of the wizard. At the end of the wizard, you can save the settings to a setup profile you can use again. The Drawing Setup command presents all the drawing settings necessary for setting up a drawing, such as units, text style, current zone, and so on, including saving and loading setup profiles. The User Preferences command has an option you can select to load a preexisting setup profile automatically.
Settings
AutoCAD Land Desktop settings are comprised primarily of two types: user preferences and drawing settings.
The User Preferences control program-wide preferences such as the project paths for various files, the AutoCAD overrides, and the drawing setup method. The preference settings are stored in the following folder: C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Autodesk\AutoCAD Land Desktop <Version Number>\<Release Number>\Data\pref The file name is <AutoCAD login name>.dfm. The preference path settings are stored in the sdsk.dfm file in the program folder.
Drawing settings control many different parameters in AutoCAD Land Desktop, such as output settings, label settings, and point settings. When you create a new drawing in a project, the drawing is assigned default drawing settings based on the prototype. After you change the drawing settings, you can save the settings to a prototype so the settings can be used by other drawings in the project. When you create a new drawing in a project that is based on that prototype, then the drawing settings that you saved to the prototype are used for the drawing. If you changed settings and you want to restore them to the original drawing settings, then you can reload the prototype settings. The drawing settings file is stored in the projects \dwg folder. The current drawing name is used as the file name with a .dfm extension. For more information, see Establishing Settings on page 20.
AutoCAD Land Desktop documentation provides help with commands in the Projects, Points, Lines/Curves, Alignments, Parcels, Labels, Terrain, Inquiry, and Utilities menus. AutoCAD documentation provides help with commands in the File, Edit, View, Insert, Format, Tools, Draw, Dimension, and Modify menus.
Chapter 1
Introduction
AutoCAD Map 3D documentation provides help with commands in the Map menu.
Note If you install Trimble Link or Carlson Connect software, you can access
Help for each of these programs from the product menu. The AutoCAD Land Desktop documentation set includes the following documents:
AutoCAD Land Desktop Network Administrators Guide (online) AutoCAD Land Desktop Getting Started (in Adobe PDF format) AutoCAD Land Desktop Users Guide (online) AutoCAD Land Desktop Tutorial (online) AutoCAD Map 3D Tutorials (online) AutoCAD Land ActiveX and VBA Developers Guide and AutoCAD Land ActiveX and VBA Reference (online) AutoCAD New Features Workshop (online) AutoCAD documentation (online) AutoCAD Map 3D documentation (online)
Finding Information
The following sections describe how to access the online Help, how to find information in Help, how to use the online tutorial, and how to use this Getting Started guide.
Accessing Help
You can access Help files for AutoCAD Land Desktop by using the following methods: Accessing Help files
Method From within AutoCAD Land Desktop, choose AutoCAD Land Desktop Help from the Help menu, type Help on the command line, or press F1. Result Displays an introductory topic in the online Help. Includes links to AutoCAD Help and AutoCAD Map 3D Help. Benefits This Help file displays a combined index and table of contents, as well as two search mechanisms so you can find the Help topics you need.
Chapter 1
Introduction
Displays the Help topic that describes how to use the dialog box.
This topic provides the information you need without having to search for it.
Key Concepts
Within a Help topic, you can move to other relevant topics or definitions by selecting the blue underlined text. Click on the navigation bar to move to the previous topics that you viewed. Only those topics that you have already viewed in the current instance of online Help are included in this Back button sequence. Click to hide the navigation pane of the Help system. Click redisplay the navigation pane. to
Help Navigation
The Help system has a variety of methods that you can use to locate information about AutoCAD Land Desktop commands, including the table of contents, index, and search tabs. There is also a Favorites tab to which you can add frequently used topics. Each of these methods has its own tab in the left pane of the Help system.
The Contents tab has books with topic pages listed below each book. To view a topic, click a book or a page. The Index tab lists words organized numerically and alphabetically. Enter a keyword to display the index entries, select a topic to view, and then click Display. If more than one topic shares the same index entry, you can choose the topic that you want to view. Only those topics that are indexed are listed on the Index tab.
Finding Information
Tip For the most accurate results, select the Search Titles Only check box at
the bottom of the Search tab.
The Favorites tab is a location where you can store frequently accessed Help topics. When you are viewing a Help topic you want to add to your favorites, click the Favorites tab, and then click Add. In addition, you can limit the search to specific parts of Help, such as only AutoCAD Land Desktop features or only AutoCAD or AutoCAD Map 3D features. For more information about using this tab, click Query Tips on the Search tab.
Concept tabs contain overview information and links to subtopics. Procedure tabs contain step-by-step procedures or contain links to subtopics. Reference tabs contain information about how to access AutoCAD Land Desktop commands and what the commands do. If there is more than one command listed on the Reference tab, move your mouse over the command name to dynamically update the information.
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Introduction
The following illustration shows how the information on the Reference tab changes as you move your mouse over a different command name.
Finding Information
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steps in a task are titles of relevant Help topics. For example, you can use the Search tab in the Help to locate the topic, Changing the Point Database Setup Settings. To set up the point database
Step Use to locate
1 From the Points menu, choose Point Management Changing the Point Point Database Setup to display the Point Database Setup Database Setup Settings dialog box.
The following example describes how you can locate a specific topic title in the Help. To use Help to locate a topic title
Steps 1 Start Help by using one of the methods listed in Accessing Help on page 8. 2 Click .
3 In the edit box on the Search tab, enter a question and then press Enter. 4 Select a Help option in from the List of Components to Search, for example AutoCAD Land Desktop Users Guide.
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Chapter 1
Introduction
Finding Information
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Chapter 1
Introduction
2
In this chapter
Starting AutoCAD Land
To start working with AutoCAD Land Desktop, you need to know the basics of operating the program. These basics include loading menu files, and project, prototype, and drawing management.
Desktop
The AutoCAD Land Desktop
drawing environment
Accessing AutoCAD Land
Desktop commands
Establishing settings Working with projects Working with drawings Exiting AutoCAD Land
Desktop
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Note When you install AutoCAD Land Desktop, an AutoCAD Land Enabled
Map 3D icon is created. Use this icon to start an object-enabled version of AutoCAD Map. You can use this version of AutoCAD Map 3D to open AutoCAD Land Desktop drawings and to view custom objects without having to select a project. Using this version, you cannot use AutoCAD Land Desktop commands, but you can open multiple drawings at a time and use all the AutoCAD and AutoCAD Map 3D commands.
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Chapter 2
Command line
Status bar
To display the menus in the AutoCAD Land Desktop, select Land Desktop in the Workspaces toolbar list.
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When you start AutoCAD Land Desktop, the AutoCAD Map 3D Workspace is displayed by default. You can use the Project Workspace to attach drawings to the current Map drawing, to define queries, and to attach databases.
Note You can run multiple sessions of AutoCAD Land Desktop on one computer. Within each session, however, only one drawing can be open at a time. The following section describes how to access AutoCAD Land Desktop commands using Workspaces, shortcut menus, toolbars, the status bar, and the command line.
Key Concepts
When you carry out a command, prompts and messages display on the command line. You can view a complete history of the prompts and messages of the current drawing session by pressing F2 to open the AutoCAD text window which records the commands. To quit a command at any time, press ESC.
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AutoCAD Land Desktop has additional context-sensitive menus that you can access by selecting an object and right-clicking.
In the Workspace toolbar list, select another workspace from the list. To display the Workspaces toolbar, click Projects menu and choose Workspaces. Enter WSCURRENT at the command line, and then enter the workspace name.
Toolbars
When you start AutoCAD Land Desktop, the AutoCAD Standard and Object Properties toolbars are displayed at the top of the window, and the Modify and Draw toolbars are displayed on the left side of the graphics screen. You can display other toolbars with various tool categories. Each toolbar contains a set of tools that represents specific commands in a category. Start a command by clicking a tool. To identify a tool, move the pointer slowly over the tool. A small label, or ToolTip, displays the tool name, as shown in the following illustration.
Toolbar Command
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Transparent Commands
You can use the command line to access a second command without leaving the first command. To use a command transparently, type an apostrophe () before the command name on the command line. For example, if you are using LINE to draw a line, you can type zoom (z) or pan (p) to change the view of the drawing and the LINE command remains active. After you have finished using a command transparently, the suspended command continues.
Note The only commands that you can use transparently are commands that
do not select or create objects, or commands that do not regenerate or end drawings.
Establishing Settings
Early in a project you should establish the following settings:
Note When you start a new drawing, you also set up the drawing for units,
zone, sheet size, and so on. For more information, see Setting Up Drawings on page 30.
User Preferences
The User Preferences control three main aspects of the program: file paths, drawing setup method, and AutoCAD overrides.
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Chapter 2
Specify the dialog box displayed by the Open and New commands, or at the start of a session.
Drawing Settings
The Edit Settings dialog box is a centralized location from which you can modify settings that are specific to each drawing. To display the Edit Settings dialog box, select the Edit Drawing Settings command on the Projects menu. The settings are arranged by program so you can more easily locate the settings that apply to a project. There are settings for AutoCAD Land Desktop, civil engineering tools (Civil Design), and surveying tools (Survey).
1. Choose the program that has the settings you want to modify. 3. Click Edit Settings.
These settings are all available elsewhere in the program. The Edit Settings dialog box provides an easy way to change different settings simultaneously and then save them back to a prototype. By saving the settings to a prototype, they are used automatically whenever you create a new drawing in a
Establishing Settings
21
project that is based on that prototype. You can establish the settings once and then apply them to each new drawing.
Prototype Settings
Every AutoCAD Land Desktop project must be based on a prototype. A prototype stores drawing settings. These settings are copied to each drawing that is created in the project. AutoCAD Land Desktop includes a prototype for meters and a prototype for feet. The Prototype Settings dialog box provides a centralized location from which you can modify prototype settings. To display the Prototype Settings dialog box, select Prototype Settings from the Projects menu, select the prototype you want to modify, and then click OK.
1. Choose the program that has the settings you want to edit. 2. Choose the setting you want to edit.
You can use the Edit Prototype Settings dialog box. You can use the Drawing Settings command to establish settings and then save them to a prototype.
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can access and modify import/export formats, speed tables, label styles, tag styles, and contour styles. To display the Edit Data Files dialog box, choose Data Files from the Projects menu.
2. Select the data file that you want to edit. 3. Click Edit Data.
4. The data file is opened so you can edit or create new data files.
If you have AutoCAD Civil 3D Land Desktop 2009 Companion, you can modify the following survey features:
Establishing Settings
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Warning! If you create data with AutoCAD Land Desktop, it is very important
that the coordinate system be set to World. If you create data in AutoCAD Land Desktop in a coordinate system other than World, that data is not processed correctly. To change the coordinate system to World, type UCS on the command line, and then type World.
To work with AutoCAD Land Desktop commands, you must have a project. You can, however, run AutoCAD or AutoCAD Map 3D commands without having a project selected. You can assign a drawing to only one project. If you want to later associate the drawing with a different project, you can re-associate the drawing by using the Reassociate Drawing command from the Projects menu. Projects can contain multiple drawings. All the drawings in a project share data files, such as the point database. If you open an existing drawing that is not assigned to a project, then you are prompted to select a project. This assignment is saved when you save the drawing.
Creating Projects
You can create a new project when you create a new drawing, or you can create a new project from the Project Manager. As you create a new project,
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use the Project Details dialog box to establish the project name, description, and keywords, as well as a prototype on which to base the drawing settings and a location for the drawing files.
Type an optional description for the project. Type optional keywords for the project.
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Create new projects. If you are a CAD Manager, then you may want to create the projects from within the Project Management dialog box so that others can start their drawings and reference the same project data. Create new project paths. By default, the project path is c:\Land Projects <Version Number>, but you can create new project paths if desired. View the project details, including project description, keywords, and drawing storage location. View and manage the file locks. On a network, you can view the file locks to see who has files open. Copy, rename, and delete projects. It is recommended that you use the Project Management dialog box for copying, renaming, and deleting project data.
Default prototypes for feet and meters are included with AutoCAD Land Desktop. If you delete the default prototypes, then they are recreated, using the default system settings, the next time that you start AutoCAD Land Desktop.
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When you install AutoCAD Land Desktop, a prototype folder (C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Autodesk\AutoCAD Land Desktop <Version Number>\<Release Number>\Data\Prototypes) is created by default. Each default prototype, and each prototype that you create, is represented by a subfolder of this root prototype folder. For example, if you create a prototype named MYPROTO, then the following folder is created: C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Autodesk\AutoCAD Land Desktop <Version Number>\<Release Number>\Data\Prototypes\myproto
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Enter the name of the new drawing. Select the project name if one exists. Or you can click Create Project to create a new project.
For more detailed information about setting up a drawing after naming it and selecting a project, see the following section, Setting Up Drawings.
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Setting Up Drawings
By default when you start a new drawing, the Drawing Setup wizard is displayed, as shown in the following illustration.
You can use this wizard to select the current zone, and to adjust the drawing units, the horizontal and vertical scales, the current text style, and other settings.
Key Concepts
Set up the drawing units and scale based on a plot scale. The precision values in the Drawing Setup wizard control displayed information and plotted labels, not the actual values that are stored in the database, which are calculated to the highest internal precision. After you modify the settings for a drawing, you can use the Load/Save Settings page to name and save the setup so that you can use the same settings for each drawing in a project. After you initially set up the drawing, you can modify the Drawing Setup values by choosing the Drawing Setup command from the Projects menu.
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Chapter 2
Opening Drawings
You can open an existing drawing by selecting the Open command from the File menu or by typing open at the command line. If you open a drawing that is associated with an existing project, then the drawing is linked automatically to that project. If you open a drawing that is not associated with a project, then you must select a project or create a new project for the drawing to work with AutoCAD Land Desktop commands.
Use proxy graphics. Use the Export to AutoCAD command on the File menu. Explode custom objects to polylines by using the EXPLODE command.
Proxy Graphics
Proxy graphics, which represent the custom objects, are used to indicate the locations of custom objects in the drawing.
Note If you share a drawing with another person who uses proxy graphics,
then make sure when you save the drawing that the PROXYGRAPHICS variable is set to 1.
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When an AutoCAD Land Desktop drawing is opened in another AutoCAD program, the Proxy Information dialog box is displayed. The Proxy Information dialog box identifies the missing application and the number of proxy objects in the drawing. The dialog box also contains three options:
Do not show proxy graphics: Does not display proxy graphics. Show proxy graphics: Replaces custom ARX objects as proxy graphics. Show proxy bounding box: Displays a box surrounding custom ARX objects called a bounding box.
From the File menu, choose Exit. Type exit or quit. Click the close box in the upper-right corner of the AutoCAD Land Desktop window.
Key Concepts
When you quit a drawing, you are prompted to save any changes that you have made but not yet saved. To allow multi-user read/write access to the point database and the alignment database, the point and alignment information is written directly to the databases, so they never need to be saved.
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Chapter 2
3
In this chapter
Point markers and labels Points and CAD commands Working with the
COGO points are used in almost every land development project to identify locations in space. COGO points contain northing, easting, elevation, description, and name information that is stored in an external point database.
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Introduction
Points that AutoCAD Land Desktop creates are called COGO points. COGO stands for Coordinate Geometry. COGO points are stored in an external database and are organized by their point numbers. COGO points have extended entity data associated with the points that includes point number, point name, description, elevation, northing, and easting. COGO point data is stored in an external database file called points.mdb, which is referenced by all drawings in a project. Because project points are stored externally, you can reference them without drafting them in a drawing. Point data can be accessed by multiple people on a network. To add points to the point database, you can do the following:
Create points using the Create Points commands on the Points menu. Import ASCII files. Import data from a Microsoft Access database file. Download from a data collector.
The following diagram illustrates the several ways to add points to a project.
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Point markers include a point marker node and point marker text for point number, description, and elevation. Although you must use labels to achieve full description key substitution, you can substitute full descriptions for raw descriptions using point markers. In contrast, point labels can label any number of items. You can customize point labels to display any type of information about points. You can label points with data from external databases by using External Data References (XDRefs). You can also set up point label styles that perform description key substitution. For more information about point markers, see Changing the Point Marker and Point Text Settings on page 40. For more information about description keys and point labels, see Working with Description Keys on page 53.
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The COGO points are usually assigned description and elevation data as well as a required point number and northing and easting coordinates. This point data is stored in the point database. In contrast, a point node exists only in a drawing file, and it has only X, Y, and Z data associated with it. You can convert CAD point nodes to COGO points by using the Convert from AutoCAD Points command from the Points Point Utilities menu.
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the point data is added to the point database and the observation data is added to the observation database.
All programs included with AutoCAD Land Desktop use the point database. You can set up the point database so multiple people can access it over a network. The point database stores all the point information outside of the drawings, which keeps the size of the drawing files smaller.
Because all the project point information is stored in one file, it is easier to manage point data for a project. This is especially true when you work on a large project that contains several different drawings or when you work on the same project with other people on a network. All commands that use point data, such as when you draw a line between points, refer to the point database, not to the drawing. Therefore, you can perform these functions even when the points are not drafted in the drawing. This gives you added flexibility when you work on large projects with thousands of points. By keeping the points out of the drawing, you can speed up redraw time significantly. Because all point information is stored in a database, you can create a new drawing and insert only the project points that meet specific criteria, such as region, point number range, or description. For example, you can insert points with descriptions associated with the boundary, such as iron pipes, corner points, or fence points. You can limit access to the point database to one person, or you can share it with other people. If you share the point database with other people, then you can use the Lock Points command from the Points menu to protect against unwanted edits to the database.
Key Concepts
All drawings in a project share a single point database file. AutoCAD Land Desktop protects against duplicate point numbers. You are prompted for how to resolve any duplicates that may arise.
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Setting the character limit for point descriptions (2 to 254). Choosing whether to use point names, and then setting the character limit for point names (2 to 254).
After you create the point database, you can choose the database open mode by running the Point Database Setup command. To run this command, choose the Point Database Setup command from the Points Point Management menu.
You can open the database so that only you have write access to it, or you can open it in multi-user mode so that multiple people can open and write to the point database. If other people are using the point database, then you cannot switch from multi-user to single-user mode until the other people close the point database. To identify the users currently using the point database, click Other Users.
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Note Changing the point settings does not affect points that are already
inserted into the drawing. To update points in the drawing with changes to the point settings (such as marker style or automatic leaders, for example), re-insert the points into the drawing.
If you choose the Automatic option, enter a value in the Default Elevation box.
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When you import points, the Insert To Drawing As Created setting is used, but certain point settings, such as elevation, point number, and description, are not applied. The Import Points command uses the information in the file that you are importing. If more than one person working on a project over a network is creating points, then each person can adjust the current point number to avoid confusion. One person could set 100 as the current point number, and another person could set 200 as the current point number. The same point number cannot be used twice in a project.
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Use the Text tab to control how the point text is displayed.
Control the visibility of number, elevation, and description. Show full or raw point descriptions. Set the test size relative to the screen or an absolute size. Create leaders automatically when moving point text.
Creating Points
Use AutoCAD Land Desktop point creation commands to create points in many ways, such as by northing/easting, along an object, by turned angle, and so on. You can create points at intersections, on a slope, on alignments, by referencing a surface, and by interpolating.
Key Concepts
Points created by using the commands on the Points menu are always added to the point database. Point prompts can differ, depending on how you set up the Point Creation Settings. Use these settings to assign elevations and descriptions to points. To create points by referencing geodetic directions, you must first choose the current zone for the drawing from the Drawing Setup dialog box.
Creating Points
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2 Click the Create tab to change the Point Creation settings. Changing the Point These settings determine the data you are prompted for, Creation Settings the data created automatically for the points, and whether the points you create are inserted into the drawing. 3 Click OK to close the Point Settings dialog box. 4 From the Points menu, choose Create Points Northing/ Creating Points at Northing/Easting Easting. Coordinates Enter the northing of the point you want to create. Enter the easting of the point you want to create. Enter the description and elevation for the point if you are prompted for them. 5 Continue to enter the northing and easting for additional points, or press ENTER to end the command.
Importing Points
A quick and effective way to place points in a project is to import them. You can use the Import Points command to import the following:
Point ASCII files Data from a Microsoft Access database file Points from another project point database
For example, if a surveyor collected point data by using a data collector, the data can be downloaded as an ASCII file and then imported into the AutoCAD Land Desktop project by doing the following: 1 Download the point data from a data collector as an ASCII text file using data collector software. 2 Create an import/export format that specifies information in the ASCII file. 3 Import the points using the import/export format.
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All points you import are added to the project point database. To create an import/export format and import points
Steps Use to locate
1 From the Points menu, choose Import/Export Creating a Point Import/ Points Format Manager to display the Format Manager Export Format dialog box.
2 You can choose from several default import/export formats. You can select one and then click View to see how the format is set up. 3 Click Add to display the Select Format Type dialog box.
4 Choose the type of import/export format you want to create. For example, to import an ASCII file, select User Point File and click OK.
Importing Points
43
5 Click the column headings (the <unused> buttons) to establish the format. The Select Column Name dialog box is displayed.
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Importing Points
45
13 Use the options in the COGO Database Import Options dialog box to determine the following:
How to resolve duplicate incoming points. What to do when point numbers are assigned by the source file. What to do when point numbers need to be assigned.
Click OK to continue. 14 From the Points menu, choose Import/Export Points Import Points to display the Format Manager Import Points dialog box. Importing Points into the COGO Point Database
15 Select the format and the source file that you want to import.
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Select any point on the screen by using object snaps or by typing X,Y coordinates. Use an AutoCAD Land Desktop point filter.
Point filters make it easy for you to accurately retrieve coordinate points from the point database or to accurately select points from the drawing. Point filters are a letter preceded by a period that you can enter at any Select Points prompt.
Type .p, press ENTER, and then enter a specific point number. Type .g, press ENTER, and then select the point in the drawing. Type .n, press ENTER, and then enter the points northing and easting coordinates.
For example, you could use the .g graphical selection filter to select any part of a point object on screen. This retrieves the exact coordinates of the point object from the point database.
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Key Concepts
Point filters remain active until you turn them off by typing the filter again, or until you select another filter. You can use the .p filter to select points that are in either the drawing or in the project database. Points must be displayed in the drawing in order to use the .g graphical selection filter.
Editing Points
The recommended method to edit COGO points is to use the Edit Points commands on the Points menu. These commands update the project point file and the points in the drawing. Use these commands to automatically update the point database to match the graphic changes, or to edit points in the project point database that are not visible in the drawing.
Note You can also use AutoCAD commands, such as MOVE or ERASE, to edit the points in the drawing. However, by default these commands do not update the project point database. To update the project point database use the Modify Project command from the Points Check Points menu.
Key Concepts
The commands in the Edit Points menu, such as Points Edit Points Erase, change both the drawing and database. AutoCAD editing commands, such as ERASE, change only the drawing and not the database. You can lock points to prevent unwanted edits by choosing Points Lock/ Unlock Points Lock Points. To edit points using MOVE, select the Allow Points to be MOVEd in Drawing check box on the Update tab in the Point Settings dialog box. Select the Update Point Database After MOVE Command check box to update the project point database.
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1 With points in the drawing (or in the point database only), Editing Points choose a point editing command, such as Move, from the Points Edit Points menu. 2 Select the points you want to move. 3 Select a base point and a point of displacement to move the point(s). Move Objects
ERASE Command
2 After you edit the points, choose Modify Project from the Updating the Project Point Points Check Points menu to update the project with Database with Drawing Point the changes that you made to the points in the drawing. Information 3 In the Modify Project Database Points from Drawing dialog box, select the options to modify the project, and then click OK.
Point Synchronization
In some situations the project points may not match the drawing points. For example, the project database does not match the drawing points when you do any of the following:
Use commands such as ERASE or COPY to modify the points. Edit points in the drawing and database, and then quit the drawing without saving it. Restore an old version of a drawing. Edit points in one drawing and then open another drawing that contains the same points.
Point Synchronization
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To change the drawing so that it matches the project point database, or to change project points to match the drawing, you can use the Check Points commands on the Points menu. You can use these commands to
Add project points to a drawing, or remove them from a drawing, so the drawing matches the project. Add points in the drawing to the project, or remove points from the project that are not in the drawing, so the project matches the drawing.
For example, if more than one person is working on the project and adding points to the point database, then the points in the drawing may not match the project points. You can update the drawing with the project points by using the Modify Drawing command from the Points Check Points menu. The following illustration shows the options available when you use this command:
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Persistent Properties: Point groups have persistent properties. This means that if points that match the properties of a point group are modified in some way, or if points were added to or removed from the point database, you can be alerted to update the point group. By using the Check Status, Show Changes, and Update features, you can check for changes to the point groups, show exactly which points that have changed, and update the point groups. Point Selection by Raw Description Matching: You can select the points to include in a point group by specifying raw description matches from the Raw Desc Matching tab. The list that appears on this tab is derived from the defined description key codes in the project. All points in the point database with raw descriptions that match the selected raw description are included in the point group.
NOTE The list on the Raw Desc Matching tab is derived from the defined
description keys in the project, but this tab does not use Description Key settings, such as the ascending/descending sort order setting. Be sure to check the point list derived from selected raw descriptions, especially when using wildcard characters.
Saving To and Loading From a Prototype: You can save a standard point group file to a prototype that you can load into other projects. Simplified Point Selection Methods: The Create Point Group dialog box has separate Include and Exclude tabs for specifying the points to include or exclude from the point group. A Summary tab summarizes the properties you define for the group and lists the total number of points in the group. Additional Point Commands: Insert points into the drawing, remove points from the drawing, erase points, lock, and unlock points in the Point Group Manager dialog box. Select the points and right-click to display these options in the shortcut menu.
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Key Concepts
You can show additional columns of data in the Point Group Manager. To show all columns (including point name, grid northing, and grid easting, which are not shown by default), right-click a column heading and choose Show All Columns from the shortcut menu. When you assign overrides, point groups can override existing point data that is contained in the point database. From within the Point Group Manager, you can lock a point group to prevent it from being updated. You can also lock the points in a point group so they cannot be edited.
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Insert symbols to visually distinguish the different types of points in the drawing. Specify layers on which to insert the points and the symbols. Scale and rotate symbols that are inserted with the points. Replace a raw (original) point description with a full description.
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When you define description keys, you assign a description key code, a description format (or full description), a symbol, a point layer, and a symbol layer. When you create or import a point with a raw description that matches a description key code, the point is placed in the drawing with the symbol, the point and symbol are placed on the specified layers, and the raw description is replaced with the full description. When you create points, you are prompted for the point number, point elevation, and point description. A description key is essentially a replacement for the point description. For example, if you type TREE as the description for a tree point, and if TREE has been defined as a description key and it has a symbol associated with it, then a tree symbol is created for that point. AutoCAD Land Desktop includes many symbols that you can use for description keys. Imperial and metric symbols are stored in subfolders of the following folder: C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Autodesk\AutoCAD Land Desktop <Version Number>\<Release Number>\Data\Symbol Manager You can also create a custom symbol to use in the drawing, and then you can use WBLOCK to save the block to the symbol folder. If you edit description keys, you can update the drawing with the new settings by using the Modify Drawing command from the Points Check Points menu.
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3 Under Search Path for Symbol Block drawing files, click Browse, and locate the following folder. C:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Autodesk\ AutoCAD Land Desktop <Version Number>\<Release Number>\Data\Symbol Manager\cogo 4 Under Point Labeling, select the Use the Current Point Label Style When Inserting Points check box. NOTE In subsequent steps, you create the point label style to use for the new points. 5 Click the Create tab. Changing the Point Creation Settings
6 Under Descriptions, select Manual. 7 Click OK to close the Point Settings dialog box. 8 From the Points menu, choose Point Management Description Key Manager to display the Description Key Manager dialog box. Using the Description Key Manager
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to display the Create Description Key dialog box. Creating a Description Key
10 For this example, type UP* as the DescKey Code. The asterisk (*) matches any point description that starts with UP. For example, UP5A or UP5B. 11 Type $* as the Description Format. Using Wildcard Characters These wildcard characters keep the point description the in Description Keys same as when you enter it, so you can distinguish between UP5A and UP5B. However, you can assign a new, full description and this description would then be used for all the utility poles.
12 Type PTS_UP as the Point Layer. This places the point objects on the PTS_UP layer. 13 From the Symbol Block Name list, select U_POLE. 14 In the Symbol Layer box, enter the layer for the symbol. 15 Click OK, and then close the Description Key Manager dialog box. 16 From the Labels menu, choose Edit Label Styles and then click the Point Label Style tab. 17 In the Name box, type Desckey style. Editing Point Label Styles
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25 Select a location in the drawing for the new point. 26 When you are prompted for the description, type UP1A. The description, UP1A, and the utility pole symbol are placed with the point, and the point and the symbol are placed on the specified layers.
Calculate the latitude and longitude, State Plane, or UTM coordinates of a point. Convert point data that is in another coordinate zone into the current drawings coordinate zone when you import points. Convert point data in a project from one coordinate system to another.
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Hundreds of different zones are provided in AutoCAD Land Desktop, including UTM projections, and NAD27 and NAD83 State Plane grids. You can also use commands to edit zones and create new zones. You can use geodetic calculations, related to the current zone, whenever you have any high-order survey calculations to complete, or if you must tie a survey into either state plane coordinates or UTM map projections. To relate the assumed local northing/easting coordinates of a survey to the selected current zone, you must set the Transformation Settings for the drawing.
Key Concepts
The State Plane coordinates are expressed as grid northing and grid easting coordinates. The assumed coordinates, local northing and local easting coordinates, are equivalent to the COGO point coordinates in the point database. The Geodetic Calculator supplies missing information related to the current zone. For example, if you know the latitude and longitude of a point, then you can enter this information into the calculator to compute the grid northing/easting coordinates. You can then use this information to set the Transformation Settings for the drawing. After you set the Transformation Settings for a drawing, you can enter the local northing/easting coordinates into the Geodetic Calculator to compute either the grid coordinates or latitude and longitude of any point.
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In the following task, two separate GPS latitude/ longitude readings are taken on two different points, and the local northing and easting readings of these points are recorded. To calculate State Plane coordinates from GPS data
Steps 1 From the Projects menu, choose Drawing Setup to display the Drawing Setup dialog box. 2 Click the Zone tab and select the current zone for the drawing. 3 Click OK to close the Drawing Setup dialog box. 4 From the Points menu choose Point Utilities Geodetic Using the Geodetic Calculator to display the Geodetic Calculator dialog box. Calculator Changing the Current Zone for a Drawing Use to locate
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4
In this chapter
Working with the
You can use points, DEM files (digital elevation models), contours, breaklines, and boundaries to generate a model of the earths surface. From this model, you can create contours and sections, and by comparing two surfaces, you can calculate volumes.
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Introduction
After you have entered data into a project, you can create a surface model from that data. A surface model is a three-dimensional geometric representation of the surface of an area of land. Surface models in AutoCAD Land Desktop are made up of triangles, which are created when AutoCAD Land Desktop connects the points that make up the surface data. The triangles form a triangulated irregular network (TIN) surface. A TIN line is one of the lines that makes up the surface triangulation, as shown in the following illustration.
To create TIN lines, AutoCAD Land Desktop connects the surface points that are closest together. These TIN lines interpolate surface elevations, filling in the gaps where no survey data or contour data is known, to create an approximation of the surface.
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In addition to points, you can also build surfaces from DEM files (Digital Elevation Models), contour, breakline, and boundary data. You can have the contours treated as individual points where the contour vertices are used as surface points, or you can have the contours treated as breaklines that prevent triangulation lines from crossing the contours. Surface TIN lines typically do not cross contour lines. To build a surface accurately, you must provide more information than points and contours. For example, to prevent surface triangulation across features such as roads or streams, you can define breaklines. Breaklines are constraint lines used by the model that represent abrupt changes in the surface. TIN lines can be drawn to and from breakline vertices, but they do not cross the breakline. By including boundaries in the surface definition, you can control how the surface extends to its outer limits, and you can hide internal areas to prevent triangulation from occurring.
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Use the shortcut menus to add the surface data to the surface folder, and then build the surface. The Volume folder in the left pane of the Terrain Model Explorer contains information about grid and composite volume surfaces that are created from the volume calculations commands on the Terrain menu. Use the Terrain Model Explorer to view properties about the volume surfaces, as well as open, close, and view volume surfaces. You can keep the Terrain Model Explorer open while you use other commands. Use the buttons in the upper-right corner of the dialog box to minimize, maximize, and close the Terrain Model Explorer.
When you add the surface data into the Terrain Model Explorer, you are determining the objects to include in the surface. These objects can be point groups, point files, points, DEM files, breaklines, contours, and boundaries.
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Key Concepts
When you import a point file into the Terrain Model Explorer, the point data is not added to the point database. The data is used exclusively for building the surface. To add contour data to a surface, you must have contour objects or polylines in the drawing. To add breaklines, you must use the commands on the Breaklines shortcut menu in the Terrain Model Explorer.
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Proximity breaklines: Defines breaklines using the surface points nearest to the breakline that you draw. You do not have to snap to exact points. Wall breaklines: Defines the elevations of a wall-type object on both sides of the wall. For example, triangulation is linked to the bottom of the wall on one side, and then begins again from the top of the wall on the other side. Standard breaklines: Defines the breaklines using the exact points or polylines that you select.
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You can use contour data either as breaklines or as points when you add the contour data to the Terrain Model Explorer. When you add contour data to the surface folder, the Contour Weeding dialog box is displayed.
When the Create as Contour Data check box is selected, the contours are treated as breakline data, so no triangulation occurs across contours. When the Create as Contour Data check box is cleared, the contour vertices are treated as point data for the purposes of triangulation.
Boundaries control how the surface TIN lines extend to the outer limits of a surface. Boundaries hide internal areas of a surface.
For example, if a pond exists on the surface, you can either build the surface and then delete the triangulation lines that cross the pond, or you can create a boundary around the pond before building the surface so that the area of the pond is hidden. The same applies to outer surface boundary lines. You can either delete the TIN lines that extend beyond the survey limits after you build the surface, or you can create a boundary around the survey limits before building the surface.
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Building Surfaces
After you choose the information to include in a surface, you can build the surface. When you build a surface, all the surface data is processed and the program calculates the surface triangulation. The triangulation is calculated by combining the breakline, contour, DEM file data, and boundary data with the surface point data and interpolating the results. Everything that you add to a surface folder in the Terrain Model Explorer can be used in the surface, but you can exclude certain data from build to build to examine different results.
Key Concepts
You can have an unlimited number of surfaces in a project or drawing. Surfaces are stored in the following folder: c:\Land Projects <Version Number>\<project name>\dtm
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You can access surfaces simultaneously across a network. The first user who opens the surface has read/write access to it. All other users have readonly access.
To build a surface
Steps 1 From the Terrain menu, choose Terrain Model Explorer to display the Terrain Model Explorer dialog box. 2 Right-click the Terrain folder and choose Create New Surface from the shortcut menu. 3 Open the new surface folder to display the icons. Use to locate
4 Add the data to be included in the surface. This data can be points, DEM files, contours, boundaries, or breaklines. To add a point group to the surface, right-click the Point Groups icon and select the point group. To add contour data to the surface, Right-click the Contours icon and generate the contour data.
Building Surfaces
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5 After you add all the surface data, Right-click the surface Building a Surface name and choose Build from the shortcut menu to display the Build Surface dialog box.
6 Enter a description for the surface. 7 Choose the surface data to use in the surface by modifying the Surface Data Options. You can also choose to build the watershed model, calculate extended statistics, and create an error file when building the surface. 8 Click OK to build the surface. A message box is displayed when the surface has been built. Click OK to continue.
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Create multiple offsets of a contour at a specified interval and grade until a specified distance or elevation is reached Copy existing contours that you can update with new grading data
Interpolate points between Offset existing polylines in two selected points, based on the drawing and apply total distance elevational changes to the offset polylines
When you are ready to create the surface based on this grading data, you must add the surface data to the surface folder in Terrain Model Explorer. The following table shows how to process each type of grading data.
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Editing Surfaces
After building a surface, you should evaluate its accuracy. Did the TIN lines generate as expected? If not, you can go back and define new surface data like points, breaklines, and boundaries. Or, if the changes are small, you can edit the surface TIN directly. For example, you can
Flip the faces of triangles to match ridges or depression areas. Add TIN lines to force retriangulation. Delete TIN lines that extend beyond survey boundaries. Add, delete, move, and edit points. Add breaklines. Paste surfaces together. Change the overall elevation of the surface by an increment.
For example, you can add a TIN line, which forces the other TIN lines that it crosses to retriangulate. You can add points to a surface, which also forces the surface to retriangulate. You can also trim out surface TIN lines that are drawn across a building pad or pond. The following illustration is an example of flipping TIN faces.
To combine two or more surfaces into one surface, paste them together. For example, you can create a surface that represents only part of a site, such as a surface that contains the grading data for a building pad. After you build this surface, you can paste it into the existing ground surface to create a finished ground surface that represents the entire site. The surface TIN lines must be in the drawing in order for you to use the Edit Surface commands. Use the Import 3D Lines command from the Edit Surface menu to import surface lines you can edit. Be sure to set the surface you are working with as current. Only the data for the current surface is used when editing.
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Edit History
Whenever you rebuild a surface, you must reapply the edits that you made to it. To save time, all edits that you make to a surface are saved in the Edit History folder in the Terrain Model Explorer.
The Edit History folder stores all the edits that you make to a surface so you can automatically repeat them when you rebuild the surface later. You can open the Edit History folder to view the edits you have made to a surface, as shown in the following illustration.
When you select the Apply Edit History check box as you rebuild the surface, all previous edits are repeated in the order that you made them. You can also change the edit history list. To not repeat a step in the edit history, delete the item from the list.
Creating Contours
Contours portray the elevational values of a surface at specified intervals, as shown in the following illustration.
Creating Contours
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You can use AutoCAD Land Desktop to create existing ground or finished ground contours. To create contours, you can
Generate contours from the current surface model. Vectorize contours on a raster image. Copy contours.
Note You can use contours to represent features other than elevations.
For example, contours can represent rainfall intensity, soil contamination lines, and so on.
smoothing grip display (for editing contours and contour labels) label text style label position
When you create contours, you must choose a style. You can also specify elevation ranges, contour intervals, and whether to create the contours as AEC contour objects or polylines. All contour definition, editing, and labeling commands work on both contour objects and polylines.
Note To edit AEC contour objects in another AutoCAD program (other than
AutoCAD Land Desktop), you must explode the contour objects because they are custom objects. Or, you can install the Object Enabler, which is available on the AutoCAD Land Desktop product media. When you create contours from a surface, you base the contours on a contour style. Use the Contour Style Manager to define and modify contour styles.
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Key Concepts
Contour styles store groups of settings in the drawing so you can use them again without having to redefine the settings you want to use. Choose a contour style when you run the Create Contours command from the Terrain menu. You can use the Manage Styles tab to save contour styles to an external file and also to add contour styles from an external file. This is helpful when you use the same contour styles in more than one drawing or in different projects. You can click inside the Preview window on the Contour Style Manager and adjust the view angle of the previewed contours by moving the pointing device.
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2 Select the surface from which you can create contours. By default, the current surface is displayed in the Surface box. 3 Specify the elevation range. 4 Specify the vertical scale. 5 Specify the minor and major contour intervals. 6 Under Properties, choose either contour objects or polylines. 7 To create contour objects, under Properties, click Style Manager to display the Contour Style Manager dialog box. Managing Contour Styles Using the Contour Styles Manager
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Calculating Volumes
You can calculate volumes or depths between surfaces by comparing them. For example, you may want to compare existing ground surface data with asbuilt data. Or, if you have borehole data, then you may want to calculate the volumes between the top surface and rock. AutoCAD Land Desktop includes three volume calculation methods:
Grid method: Creates a volume surface that is based on a grid that compares elevational information between the first and second surface. Composite method: Creates a volume surface that includes all the surface points from the first and second surface. The Z values in the new surface are the elevational difference between the first and second surface. Section method: Calculates volumes based on sampled cross sections.
You can also calculate parcel volumes, which are based on parcels that exist within the larger site. In all cases, you need two surface models. From the two surfaces, you must define a stratum, which specifies the two surfaces used in volume calculations. Before you can calculate volumes, you must define a site that represents the stratum area for which you want to calculate volumes.
Calculating Volumes
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To calculate volumes
Steps 1 Define at least two surfaces, such as existing ground and proposed ground. Use to locate
Building a Surface
2 From the Terrain menu, choose Select Current Stratum to Defining a Stratum create a stratum that defines the two surfaces that you compare. 3 From the Terrain menu choose Site Definition Define Site to define the site area. A site is essentially a rectangular area in which all volume calculations are performed. It also defines the grid size that is used when creating a grid surface. 4 To calculate volumes using the section method, select Sampling Section Data for Terrain Section Volumes Sample Sections to generate Volume Calculations the cross section data. 5 Calculate cut/fill volumes for the site. Volumes are calculated based on the method that you choose.
To use the grid method, select Terrain Grid Volumes Calculate Total Site Volume. To use the composite method, select Terrain Composite Volumes Calculate Total Site Volume. To use the section method, select Terrain Section Volumes Calculate Volume Total.
Calculating Total Site Volumes Using the Grid Method Calculating Total Site Volumes Using the Composite Method Calculating Total Site Volumes Using the Section Method
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6 You can create volume reports, print the results, or include Creating a Total Volume them in a table in the drawing by using commands from Table for a Site the Terrain Volume Reports menu, as shown in the following illustration.
7 If you used the section volume calculation methods, then Plotting a Single Volume you can plot the cross sections in the drawing by selecting Section Terrain Section Volumes Plot Single.
Calculating Volumes
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In this chapter
Working with alignments Working with parcels
Creating alignments and parcels with AutoCAD Land Desktop is a two-step process. First, you create the geometry, such as the roadway centerlines and parcel boundaries, and then you define the geometry as alignments and parcels.
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Introduction
You can draft horizontal alignments and parcels at any time during the project process. You can begin by drawing objects, such as lines, curves, spirals, or polylines, to represent the geometry of an alignment or parcel. Then, you can define an alignment or parcel to a database. All data is stored in an external database and all drawings in a project can access that data. Because of the external database, you do not need to draft alignments or parcels in a drawing to reference them. After you define objects, you can delete them from the drawing. Then, if you must visually reference alignments or parcels, you can import them into the drawing.
If other projects contain alignments that you want to include in a current project, then you can merge alignment databases and import alignments into a drawing. If someone on a network needs write access to the alignment you have set as current, then you can close the alignment database or select a different current alignment while you keep a drawing open. It is not necessary to keep alignment objects in a drawing. You can delete them and import the alignments only when needed.
You can edit the data in the alignment database by using the Alignment Editor. Any changes that you make to an alignment in the Alignment Editor are updated in the drawing. The Alignment Editor can also generate reports. The civil engineering tools provide advanced roadway design capabilities, such as profile and cross section design.
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alignment, you can set a different alignment current or you can close the Alignment database. To share an alignment database with someone using Release 1 of AutoCAD Land Development Desktop, you can save the alignment database in the previous format of the alignment database as a project.adb file. Choose the Save as .adb command from the Alignments Alignment Commands menu.
Key Concepts
If you use the Lines/Curves menu commands instead of PLINE or LINE, then the lines, curves, and spirals are drawn tangent to their adjacent object. You can define more than one alignment from the same alignment geometry.
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Drawing Lines
Drawing Curves
Defining Alignments Defining an Alignment from Objects Defining an Alignment from a Polyline
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Use
to locate
If the alignment is drafted in the drawing, then click the alignment with the pickbox. When prompted to select an alignment, press ENTER, and then select the alignment from the Alignment Librarian. When prompted to select an alignment, press ENTER. Click Cancel to close the Alignment Librarian, and then enter the number of the alignment to make it current.
Use the Horizontal Alignment Editor to modify individual curve, tangent, and spiral geometry, and to generate reports based on the alignment. After you save the changes, drawing objects are automatically updated, so you do not need to redefine the alignment geometry.
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Key Concepts
The Horizontal Alignment Editor is linked dynamically to the drawing. Changes that you make in the Editor update the alignment automatically in the drawing. You can use the Horizontal Alignment Editor to modify PIs (Points of Intersection) and alignment curves and spirals. The editor is similar to a spreadsheet. You must select inside the cell that you want to modify. To change the alignment properties, such as the alignment layer, color, linetype, or description, use the Modify Properties command from the Alignments Alignment Commands menu.
Making an Alignment Current Editing Horizontal Alignments Editing a Horizontal Alignment Curve Editing a Horizontal Alignment Spiral
2 From the Alignments menu, choose Edit to display the Horizontal Alignment Editor dialog box. 3 To edit a curve, place the cursor in a cell at a curve point of intersection (PI), and then click Edit Curve. 4 To edit a spiral, place the cursor in a cell at a spiral point of intersection, and then click Edit Spiral. 5 After you have finished editing, click OK to save all changes in the database and update the graphics.
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Key Concepts
All annotation is based on the current alignment in the database. To station or create offsets for an alignment, it must be defined to the database.
2 From the Alignments menu, choose Create Offsets to display the Alignments Offset Settings dialog box.
3 Select the offsets that you want to create, and then enter names for them. 4 To define the offsets to the Horizontal Alignment Database, select the Define Offset Alignments check box. 5 Click OK to create the offsets.
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7 Select the station format options, and click OK. 8 From the Alignments menu, choose Station Label Settings Changing the Alignment to change the station label settings. Station Label Settings
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9 From the Alignments menu, choose Create Station Labels Creating Station Labels on to create station labels. The labels are displayed as shown an Alignment in the following illustration.
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After you define a parcel, you can calculate its earthwork volumes using the grid and composite volume methods. For more information about earthwork, see Calculating Volumes on page 79. You can use the AutoCAD Map 3D commands to create a database of parcel numbers, owners, cost, and so on to help manage parcel maps.
Note Do not use spirals in parcel boundaries. Spirals cause incorrect areas to
be reported. You can also use Survey to draw parcel boundaries as Survey Figures. You can use the Survey Command Language to input the data in a data collector, or you can input the data using the Survey command line.
Note Be sure to draw the parcels as closed regions. If any of the joining lines
has a break, then you cannot calculate areas. If you use polylines to draw parcel geometry, then you must break crossing polylines before defining the parcels. Also, delete any duplicate lines that you may have drawn where two parcels abut each other. You can break crossing lines and erase duplicate lines by using the AutoCAD Map 3D Cleanup command.
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The following illustration shows how a parcel is defined by using the Slide Bearing command.
Depending on the parcel settings, these commands can define the parcel to the parcel database, and they can also label the parcel that is calculated. You cannot use the Parcel Sizing commands to modify a parcel that is already defined to the parcel database. To change a parcel definition, you must delete the existing parcel definition and redefine the parcel. For more information about deleting parcels, see Managing Parcels on page 96.
Drawing Parcels
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3 Under Options, select the Label Parcels as Defined and the Automatic Label Placement check boxes. 4 Under Parcel Numbering, select the Sequential On check box to number the parcels sequentially. If you clear this check box, then you are prompted for the parcel number each time you define a parcel. You can use alpha-numeric characters for parcel numbers. 5 Under Parcel Numbering, select the Labels On check box to label each parcel with its number. 6 Under Square Feet/Meters Labeling, select the Labels On check box to label each parcel with its area. 7 Click OK. 8 From the Parcels menu, choose Define from Polylines. Defining a Parcel from a Polyline
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Managing Parcels
You can use the Parcel Manager to
Import, delete, and rename parcels. Report area, inverse, and map check information.
To access the Parcel Manager, shown in the following illustration, choose Parcel Manager from the Parcels menu.
Key Concepts
Use the Rename option to assign alpha-numeric names to the parcels. Use the Import option to import parcels into a drawing if you have erased the parcel lines or if you want the parcels to be visible in a different project drawing. Erasing the parcels with the ERASE command does not remove the parcel database definitions. To redisplay the parcels in the drawing, import them with the Parcel Manager. Use the Delete option to permanently delete the parcels. This option deletes the parcel from the parcel database.
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You can report parcel information such as area, perimeter, map check, and inverse results. After you review the results, you can either print them or save them to a text file for final reports. If you created a parcel definition from a Survey figure, then you can report additional data about the parcels by using the Survey figure display, inverse, map check, and perimeter closure commands.
Defining Parcels
2 From the Parcels menu, choose Parcel Manager to display Managing Parcels the Parcel Manager dialog box. 3 In the Select Parcel list, select one or more parcels about which you want to report information. When you select a parcel, it is marked with an asterisk. 4 Click Output Settings and select the report options, such as the report name and destination. Click OK to close the Output Settings dialog box. 5 Click Area to create an area report. Reporting Parcel Area, Inverse, or Map Check Data Changing the Output Settings - concept
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In this chapter
Listing object data Labeling objects
To check object characteristics, you can perform inquiries which list object data at the command line or in a dialog box. To label objects with selected information, you can create dynamic and static labels, and you can create object tables that list detailed information about tagged objects in the drawing.
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Introduction
To check object characteristics, you can perform an inquiry on a drawing object. An inquiry shows you information about the selected object on the command line, the status bar, or in a tracking window. If you want a more permanent solution for identifying drawing objects especially when you are ready to plot the drawingyou can label the drawing objects at any time during the drawing process. AutoCAD Land Desktop can create dynamic labels, which update whenever you edit the drawing objects. If you do not want labels to update automatically, then you can create static labels. To annotate a drawing manually, then you can create text (TEXT), multi-line text (MTEXT), or text on a curve (CTEXT). Both text and multi-line text do not move or update when a drawing changes; however, as a curve is modified, the curve text moves with it.
Region/Mass Properties Calculates and displays the mass properties of regions or solids. List Displays information of selected objects.
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List the raster images that are inserted into a drawing and locate the source files by using the Manage command from the Map Image menu. List the alignments that are defined in the project by using the List Defined command from the Alignments Alignment Commands menu. List the breaklines that are defined in the project by using the List Breaklines command from the Breaklines shortcut menu in the Terrain Model Explorer. Show statistics for a surface model in the Terrain Model Explorer. Create alignment, stakeout, volume, and parcel reports.
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To list the station and offset of a location in relation to the current alignment
Steps 1 Define an alignment. Use to locate
Defining Alignments
2 From the Inquiry menu, choose Station/Offset Alignment. Listing the Station and Offset of a Location in Relation to the Current Alignment 3 Select a location in the drawing area that is adjacent to the current alignment. The station and offset of the location is listed on the command line.
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Labeling Objects
You can label the lines, curves, spirals, and polylines in drawings by using the AutoCAD Land Desktop labeling commands. Each object can have more than one label. You can customize label styles to apply to the drawing objects, or you can use one of the predefined label styles included with AutoCAD Land Desktop. You can include the information either along an object, at a point next to the object, or in a table. Depending on your requirements, you can choose from three different labeling methods:
Dynamic labels: Creates labels that update automatically. Static labels: Creates labels that never change as you move an object or modify a style. Tag labels: Tags each object with a tag label and places detailed information in a table.
All methods require you to select a label style, and then label the object.
Label Styles
To control the display of labels, and to specify the type of information that is labeled, you can set up label styles. For example, you can set up a label style which labels the distance and direction of a line and displays on top of the line. Whenever you modify a style that was used to create dynamic labels, the labels are updated to reflect the edited style. Point label styles control the use of description keys for points, and they can also be formatted to label points with information that is located in external Microsoft Access databases. For more information about label styles, see Editing Label Styles on page 108.
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To display the Style Properties dialog bar, select Show Dialog Bar from the Labels menu. You can dock the dialog bar either on the top or bottom, but not to the side, of the graphics window.
Tip To move the dialog bar into either the menu or the command line areas,
but to not dock it, hold down CTRL as you move the dialog bar.
Key Concepts
You can label objects individually or as a group, and you can label any combination of lines, curves, spirals, and polylines simultaneously. Polylines use the current line label style for straight segments, and the current curve style for curved segments. Only lightweight polylines can be labeled. You can control label details, such as arrows, spacing, alternate units, and angle units, when you set up the label styles. To label alignments, contours, and parcels, use the labeling commands from the Alignments, Terrain, and Parcels menus.
2 From the Labels menu, choose Show Dialog Bar to display Using the Style Properties the Style Properties dialog bar. Dialog Bar
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Selecting the Current Label Style from the Style Properties Dialog Bar
7 Click the General tab. 8 Verify that the Update Labels When Style Changes and the Specifying How Labels Are Update Labels When Objects Change check boxes are Updated selected. These check boxes control whether the labels are updated when you edit an object or label style. The Update Labels When Objects Change check box must be selected if you want to create dynamic labels. 9 Click OK to return to the drawing. 10 Select the lines that you want to label.
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11 Right-click, and then choose Add Dynamic Label from the Creating Dynamic Labels shortcut menu. Labels are added, as shown in the following illustration.
12 If you click a grip on one of the lines and drag it to a new location, the labels are updated with the new distances and angles.
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2 From the Labels menu, choose Show Dialog Bar to display Using the Style Properties the Style Properties dialog bar. Dialog Bar 3 Verify that the icon is displayed. When this icon is Selecting the Current Label displayed, the Current Label Style list shows only tag label Style from the Style styles. Properties Dialog Bar If the icon is displayed, then the list of styles shows only regular label styles. You can click the label icon to display the tag icon. 4 Click the Line tab. 5 Select the Tag Number style. 6 Select the lines that you want to label. 7 Right-click, and then choose Add Tag Label from the shortcut menu. 8 From the Labels menu, choose Add Tables Line Table to Creating a Line Table display the Line Table Definition dialog box. By default, the Column Definitions are set up to place line Changing the Column Definitions of a Line Table number, line length, and bearing in the table. 9 Click OK to create the table. 10 Select an insertion point for the table. This is the upperleft corner of the table. The table is placed in the drawing.
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1 From the Labels menu, choose Edit Label Styles to display Label Styles the Edit Label Styles dialog box. 2 Click the Line Label Styles tab. Editing Line Label Styles
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Labeling Objects
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7
In this chapter
Using the LandXML Import and
Export commands
Exporting data in LandXML
format
Importing LandXML data
111
Exchange data. For example, you can import LandXML data into other software applications that support imported XML. The data can then be modified and delivered to customers and agencies in the required formats. Transfer and archive data. For example, you can transfer data to another AutoCAD Land Desktop project, or archive project data in a nonproprietary format. Create custom reports. For example, you can transform the data into custom reports by applying XSL style sheets. See the www.landxml.org website for examples. You can also generate reports using Autodesk LandXML Reporting, a stand-alone reporting tool that is included with AutoCAD Land Desktop. Convert units. For example, you can export data from an imperial project, and then import it into a metric project to scale and convert values. Translate and rotate coordinates. For example, you can use the Import LandXML and Export LandXML commands to globally adjust the elevations of project data. Identify project data that has changed. For example, if you change a project after exporting it, you can use the LandXML Import command (without actually importing data) to compare the current project to the exported LandXML file. Any differences between the project data are listed in the LandXML Import Comparison Results dialog box.
The Import LandXML and Export LandXML commands are based on the LandXML schema. For more information about the LandXML schema, go to www.landxml.org.
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COGO points Point groups Description keys Surfaces Parcels Alignments Profiles Cross sections Interactive Highway Safety Design Model (IHSDM) data Pipe runs
The following illustration shows the LandXML Export dialog box, which you can access by choosing Export LandXML from the Projects menu. Use the options in this dialog box to select the data to export and to specify Export Options and Point Reference settings.
Key Concepts
When you select the points to export, you can also choose to export the point groups and description key definitions. When you select the surfaces to export, you can also choose to export the watershed definitions.
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When you select the alignments to export, you can also choose to export profiles, cross sections, and Interactive Highway Safety Design Model (IHSDM) data. Use the Export Data Options to control the data precision, the imperial unit foot type, the units of exported angles and directions, and whether to export raw descriptions, full descriptions, or both. Use the Export File Options to control the level of detail contained in the exported file. You can export point references for surfaces, alignments, and parcels. Point references substitute references to COGO points instead of using coordinates for the geometric points on an alignment or parcel.
Exporting LandXML Data from AutoCAD Land Desktop Selecting the Point Data to Export
2 Select the data to export by using the Points, Surfaces, Parcels, and Alignments buttons.
NOTE To export the specified data, the check boxes next to the Points, Surfaces, Parcels, and Alignments buttons Selecting the Surface Data to Export must be selected. To export pipe run data, the All Pipe Runs check box must be selected. Selecting the Parcel Data to Export Selecting the Alignment Data to Export Selecting the Pipe Data to Export Changing the Point 3 To export point references for surface, parcel, and Reference Options alignment geometry, select the Surfaces, Parcels, and Alignments check boxes under Point References, and then click Advanced to set the tolerance value. Changing the LandXML 4 To set the data precision, the foot type (for imperial projects only), the units of exported angles and directions, Export Data Options and how point descriptions are exported, click Data under Export Options.
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COGO points Point groups Description keys Surfaces Parcels Alignments Profiles
Note The LandXML Import command does not support cross sections or pipe
data.
Key Concepts
You can specify the data to import in two phases. First, in the LandXML Import dialog box, specify the general data types to import, such as points. Then, in the LandXML Import Selection dialog box, use the options to specify exactly the points (or other data) to import.
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By using the LandXML Import Region Selection dialog box, you can limit the import of data to a specified region in the project. Use a polyline or a window selection to specify coordinates in the current drawing..
3 Under File Contents, select the check boxes for the data types you want to import. If the file does not contain a data type, then that check box is unavailable for selection.
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Use
to locate
Converting Units When Importing LandXML Data Translating and Rotating LandXML Data Importing LandXML Data Within a Region
LandXML Import Unit Conversion LandXML Import Translate/Rotate LandXML Import Region Selection
LandXML Import 8 Finally, the LandXML Import Comparison Results dialog box is displayed, which shows you the data in the file that Comparison Results is new or different compared to the current project. Click OK to continue. 9 In the LandXML Import Selection dialog box, specify the Selecting LandXML Data to points, point groups, description keys, surfaces, parcels, Import and alignments to import, and then click Import to import the data.
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In this chapter
Civil Engineering Tools
The features described in this chapter are available when you install AutoCAD Civil 3D Land Desktop Companion 2009. The stand-alone version of AutoCAD Land Desktop does not include these features.
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Grading plans Proposed site plans Watershed analysis Culvert, weir, and riser design Existing ground profile extraction and drafting Proposed vertical alignment design Roadway sectional design Subdivision layout plans Proposed roadway plans Septic design plans Roadway plan, profile, and cross section sheets Pipe design plans
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Menus
The Civil Design workspace adds the following menus to AutoCAD Land Desktop: Pull-down menus included in the Civil Design workspace
Menu Grading Functionality Perform site grading using grading objects, points, and daylighting; create grading plans for detention ponds Create intersections, cul-de-sacs, parking stalls, and sports fields Create existing ground and finished ground profiles Create existing ground and finished ground sections Perform hydrologic site studies using runoff, pipe, channel, culvert, weir, and orifice calculators Create pipes and pipe nodes Set up plan, profile, and section sheets for plotting
Layout
For more information about starting new drawings and projects, see Working with Drawings.
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In this chapter
Overview of grading Using grading objects and
Use the commands on the Grading menu to create finished ground surfaces for a site. You can create and edit grading objects, calculate daylighting information, calculate volumes, and create and shape detention pond definitions.
daylighting commands
Creating a grading object Editing a grading object Creating contours and surface
Daylighting commands
Working with ponds
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Overview of Grading
When you add or remove soil, rock, and other materials to shape the land for a project, you generally develop a grading plan to indicate how the finished surface appears. The grading tools enable you to model the existing and proposed ground surfaces and analyze the design. After you develop a grading plan, you can then create a proposed surface model. You can use the surface model to analyze a site efficiently and accurately and to create reports, graphics, and 3D presentation materials that are necessary for the completion of the project. When you use the finished ground model, you can do the following:
Calculate cut and fill volumes Determine grading limits Generate proposed grade and cut and fill contours Calculate the watershed areas for the surface Create post-development runoff models
Grading objects: Provides a fast, efficient 3D modeling tool that accurately represents such design elements as roadways, embankments, parking areas, excavations, or ponds. For more information about grading objects, see Creating a Grading Object on page 126. Daylight points, lines, and breaklines: Elevational points and breaklines can be generated to represent daylight slopes. You can draw a resultant daylight polyline to connect the daylight points. The daylight polyline is a 3D polyline that represents the match line of the slopes to the surface. It can be used as a breakline and a border in surface definition. It can also be used to represent a work limit line.
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Finished grade labels: Labels surface elevations. Stratum: Defines a group of two surfaces where the differences between the two surfaces can be used to calculate volumes and elevation. Pond models: Used in planning stormwater management and in hydrology calculations.
After you have created all finished ground grading data, you can then create a finished ground surface.
NOTE It is recommended that you create new layers for the finished ground
data. Before you define the surface data when creating the new surface, you can freeze or turn off all unnecessary layers. By using separate layers, it is easy to select only the information for a specific surface. You can create separate layers for finished ground points, contours, and breaklines, or place them all on the same layer.
Direct water ways between grading pads for a subdivision. Add and update curb islands. Facilitate what-if designing by creating interactive projects that are easily updated.
Daylighting commands provide a backward compatibility that may be familiar to many users. Using the Daylighting commands, you can:
Design a parking lot that has a ditch. Add step slopes to a design. Provide updating flexibility to a large and complex design.
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Key Concepts
Grading objects can be created from open or closed footprints. You can create a grading object using one of two methods. The Grading Wizard steps you through every setting you need to establish, and then creates the grading object. Or, you can use the two-step process of changing the settings, and then applying grading. After you create a grading object, you can make changes in the grading properties, or you can use grips to modify the grading object. You can create surfaces and breaklines from a grading object.
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You can calculate general volume statistics and balance volumes for a grading object when its grading target is a terrain surface or an absolute elevation.
Configuring the Grading 2 On the Footprint page, enter a Grading Scheme Name and Description for the footprint. Select Inside or Outside Footprint Settings or, when the footprint is open, select Right or Left for the direction you want to grade from the footprint. Change the Base Elevation of the footprint and edit vertex elevations as necessary. 3 On the Targets page, select the target you want to grade Configuring the Grading to, a surface, an elevation, or a distance. You can add and Targets Settings delete target regions as necessary.
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5 On the Corners page, choose a corner treatment for all Configuring the Grading corners, or enter corner treatments for individual corners. Corners Settings 6 On the Accuracy page, select a method for spacing, and enter increment values for the projection lines. 7 On the Appearance page, select the color, visibility, and linetype for the grading object components, and then select the grips you want visible in the drawing. Click Finish to complete the process. Configuring the Grading Accuracy Settings Configuring the Grading Appearance Settings
NOTE The pages in the Grading Wizard correspond to the tabs in the Grading
Properties and Settings dialog boxes.
Grading Settings
3 From the Grading menu, choose Slope Grading Apply Creating Grading Objects Grading to apply the settings and create a grading object.
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Change the grading properties. Use grips to edit the grading object. Edit the grading object by right-clicking the object, and choosing commands from a shortcut menu.
To edit a grading object, it must be unlocked to update automatically. If the grading object is locked, you can make changes, but they do not take effect until you unlock the grading object. To edit a grading objects properties using menu commands
Steps 1 From the Grading menu, choose Slope Grading Grading Properties. 2 Select a grading object. The Grading Properties dialog box is displayed. 3 Modify the properties as needed. When you exit the Grading Properties dialog box, the grading object is updated with the changes. Grading Settings Use to locate
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2 Select the grip you want to edit. The following illustration shows the location of grading object grips.
TIP You can choose the grips to be displayed on a grading object by changing the appearance settings in the Grading Properties. 3 Move the grip to edit the grading object. The data in the Grading Properties dialog box reflect the changes you made using grips.
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You can create a new surface from the grading object. You can create contours. You can create breakline data from the grading object for any new or existing surface.
Key Concepts
Surfaces are created using 3D information from the grading object footprint, daylight lines, and projection lines. The footprint and projection lines are treated as breaklines. The daylight line is treated as a boundary. After you have created the surface it has the same functions as other surfaces. You can then manage the surface from within the Terrain Model Explorer. By using the Create Contours command, you can create contours directly from a grading object without having to first create a terrain model surface. Breaklines can be created from a grading object and added to the current surface, to a new surface, or to any existing surface.
2 From the Grading menu, choose Slope Grading Create Creating a Surface from a Surface to display the New Surface dialog box. Grading Object 3 Enter a name and an optional description for the surface, and click OK. The surface is created and built. 4 To view the surface details, use the Terrain Model Explorer. From the Terrain menu, choose Terrain Model Explorer. 5 To see the surface details, in the left pane of the Terrain Model Explorer, open the folder of the surface you created from the grading object.
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2 From the Grading menu, choose Slope Grading Create Creating Contours from a Contours. Grading Object 3 In the Create Contours dialog box, change the settings as Creating Contours from a needed and click OK to create the contours. The Create Surface Contours dialog box is used to create contours from a surface as well as from a grading object.
2 From the Grading menu, choose Slope Grading Create Creating Breaklines from a Breaklines. Grading Object 3 Do one of the following:
Type Current to add breaklines to the current surface. Select the grading object and enter a description for the breaklines. Type New to add the breaklines to a new surface. The New Surface dialog box is displayed. Enter a name and a description for the new surface, and click OK. Type Select to add the breaklines to an existing surface. The Select Surface dialog box is displayed. Select the surface you want the breaklines to be added to and click OK.
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Key Concepts
To use the Daylighting commands, an existing ground surface model is required. You can use either lightweight, 2D, or 3D polylines to draw the footprint outline. A match line is projected perpendicularly from each vertex on the polyline to the surface model. The more vertices, the better the proposed daylight match line.
Creating 3D Polylines 2 Use the 3D polylines commands in the Terrain 3D Polylines menu to create the proposed design. Draft the proposed outline using 3D polylines either at a continuous elevation or at changing elevations. 3 From the Terrain menu, choose 3D Polylines Fillet 3D Polyline to fillet (round) the corners of the outline, as necessary. This creates more daylight projections radially around each corner. 4 From the Grading menu, choose Daylighting Add Vertices to add more vertices to the polyline outline. The closer the vertices, the more accurate the daylight slopes. Filleting 3D Polyline Vertices
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6 To insert objects into the drawing that represent the grading plans, you can use the Daylight All command to import a 3D daylight match line and proposed grading points and breaklines. You can then use these objects to create the proposed ground surface model.
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There are six groups of commands on the Grading menu that you can use to define ponds and shape them:
Pond Settings: Changes settings for contours, slope control lines, and benches. Pond Perimeter: Draws a pond perimeter, changes its elevation, adds vertices to the perimeter, fillets the perimeter, and saves and imports perimeter shapes. Define Pond: Names or renames a pond, defines pond geometry by selecting existing polylines or contours, or deletes a pond from the drawing. Pond Slopes: Grades the bank of the pond. Shape Pond: Shapes the pond, by creating the contours, slope control lines, and the bottom polyline, after you have created the pond slope design. List/Label Pond: Lists information about ponds and labels them in the drawing.
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4 From the Grading menu, choose Pond Slopes Draw Drawing a Pond Slope Slope Template to draw the pond slope template polyline. Template There are several ways to shape the pond. One method is to use a pond slope template, as shown below.
The pond slope template is essentially a cross section view of the pond perimeter. You draw the pond slope template at a 1:1 scale, and then you can apply it to the pond perimeter. 5 To define the pond template, from the Grading menu, choose Pond Slopes Define Template. 6 To designate the current template, from the Grading menu, choose Pond Slopes Set Current. 7 From the Grading menu, choose Pond Slopes By Template to apply the current pond slope template to all the vertices of the pond perimeter polyline. 8 Type Yes when you are prompted to Shape Pond. Shaping the pond brings pond slope data and contours into the drawing. 9 Verify that the detention pond design meets the design criteria and conditions. Defining a Pond Slope Template Selecting the Current Pond Slope Template Applying a Slope Template to a Pond
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In this chapter
Hydrology and hydraulics Gathering data for
The civil engineering tools provide a variety of methods you can use to calculate runoff from a site, perform routing, and design detention basin inflow and outflow structures.
hydrologic analysis
Using the hydrology calculators Calculating runoff Using the hydraulic structure
calculators
Routing ponds
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Calculate runoff from watershed areas using the Rational, the TR-55 Graphical Peak Discharge and Tabular Hydrograph Methods, and the TR-20 method. Develop pre- and post-development runoff models. Design various types of retention/detention facilities to store excess runoff. Design and analyze hydraulic conveyance structures such as channels, culverts, and weirs.
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Key Concepts
Before starting a hydrologic analysis of a site, determine the soil groups existent at the site, the cover type, treatment, and hydrologic condition. These features affect the results of the pre-development runoff calculations. A good way to start the hydrologic analysis of a site is to use the Terrain Model Explorer to create a surface model, complete with topographical information, watershed boundaries, subarea flow paths, slope arrows, and relevant hydrologic data. The compiled topographic and hydrologic data should extend sufficiently off-site to provide adequate coverage of the drainage area affected by the proposed development.
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Using the Terrain Model Explorer Creating a Watershed Model After Building the Surface
3 From the Terrain menu, choose Surface Display Slope Drawing Arrows on a Arrows to draw arrows that follow the slope of the existing Surface that Show Surface surface. Slopes 4 From the Terrain menu, choose Surface Utilities Water Drop to draw flow paths. The Water Drop command traces the path of a drop of water from the origin point to the point where it outflows. This can help you determine where the major outflow points are and where you may need to add hydraulic structures. Drawing Water Drop Paths on the Current Surface
Data generated with the Water Drop command can help you visualize the surface slopes and determine where water flows and accumulates during a storm. You can use this information to decide the best way of controlling the flow. After youve visualized the runoff paths on the surface, you can calculate the peak runoff flow for different storm events.
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An error message is displayed at the bottom of the dialog box whenever you make an error entering data. The civil engineering tools include the following hydrology calculators:
You can use the calculators in two different ways: independently or nested. If you use the calculators independently, you use only one dialog box at a time. If you use them in a nested fashion, you can access certain calculators from within other dialog boxes. For example, while calculating time of concentration (Tc), you may want to calculate the sheet flow component of Tc. A separate calculator is displayed to perform these calculations and transfer the results to the other dialog box. Each calculator has its own command to run the calculator and save the values to a file. The hydrology calculators all use a similar data-entry methodology. The following illustration shows a time of concentration calculator. To solve for the total Tc, you enter values for Sheet, Shallow, and Channel flow in the boxes, or click Select to display separate calculators for these components.
As an additional feature, you can enter values as mathematical equations. For example, if the first sheet flow component is the sum of two sub-components, 10 and 5 minutes, you can type 10+5, and 15 is displayed.
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Calculating Runoff
Runoff is the water that flows out of a watershed subarea as a result of a storm event. It is typically expressed as a flow rate in cubic feet per second, or as a volume in cubic feet or acre-feet. The runoff volume is equal to the volume of rainfall that occurs on the area, minus the volume of rainfall that is infiltrated by the ground, is intercepted by foliage, or is held in small depressions. Runoff is calculated by examining the following:
Rainfall intensity, duration, and distribution Soil conditions Antecedent moisture conditions (how much moisture is already present in the soil before the storm occurs) Land use
Sometimes a runoff volume within a specified time period is adequate for design purposes, but a peak flow rate is generally needed also. In many cases, a hydrograph is required to show a flow-versus-time relationship. The civil engineering tools provide the following methods for calculating peak runoff flow rates from watershed areas:
NOTE It is important that you have some familiarity with the methods and
terminology described above. For more information about NRCS (Natural Resources Conservation Service) methods, you can obtain documents from your local NRCS or county Soil & Water Conservation District office, most college libraries, or the National Technical Information Service in Washington, D.C.
Calculating Runoff
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Before calculating runoff you should check with your local city or county for their applicable requirements. For a general guide refer to the following table.
If you want to size a storm pipe or culvert calculate runoff from multiple subareas
Then use the Rational Method or TR-55 Methods. the Rational Method or TR-55 Tabular Method. the TR-55 Tabular Method or the TR-20 Method. the TR-20 Method.
create a hydrograph for a storm event with a 24-hour duration create a hydrograph for a storm event of different length than 24 hours calculate runoff volume for designing storage facilities using the storage indication method (reservoir routing) calculate runoff volume for designing storage facilities
TR-55 methods.
Key Concepts
You can use the commands from the Hydrology menu to determine
Applicable rainfall distribution type Size of the drainage area (A) Runoff curve number (RCN) Runoff coefficient (C) Adjustment factor, the time of concentration (Tc) Time of travel (Tt) Size of the pond and swamp area Rainfall frequency Rainfall intensity for each subarea
Slopes and elevations across a site can be extracted from a surface model. You can also build a surface and model the watershed before calculating runoff by using Terrain Model Explorer in AutoCAD Land Desktop. Establish an intensity duration frequency (IDF) curve file (.idf extension) for the project location.
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Pipes (both pressure and gravity flow) Channel Orifice Weir Riser Culvert
The following illustration shows a Mannings n gravity pipe calculator. To solve for the flow rate, enter values in the Slope, Mannings n, Depth of Flow, and Diameter boxes.
As with the hydrology calculators, you can enter values as mathematical equations. For example, if the required diameter is 36 inches and the required flow percentage in a particular pipe is 75%, then type 36*0.75, and the value 27.0 is displayed. You can also specify the value in any units and the value is automatically converted to units that are specified in the settings. For example, if the settings units are inches, type 2ft, and the value 24 is displayed. Or, if the settings units are meters, type 2ft, and the value 0.6096 is displayed. The value and units may be separated by a space, but this is not required.
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Routing Ponds
One of the most common requirements for post-development storm water management is that the post-development discharges not exceed the pre-development discharges for one or more storm frequencies. The detention basin is generally the least expensive and most reliable measure for controlling post-development peak discharges. To begin the process of designing a detention pond, start by calculating the post-development runoff using one of the runoff calculation methods. The hydrograph of the post-development runoff flow is called the inflow hydrograph because it represents the flow rate of water entering the detention pond. Using this inflow hydrograph (and other runoff data), you can calculate the required storage volume for a pond. In addition, you can generate the outflow hydrograph that represents the flow rate of water exiting the detention pond. This process of calculating the outflow hydrograph for a detention basin based on the inflow is called routing.
Key Concepts
The program provides two commands to calculate routing data. Use the Detention Basin Storage command to calculate the required storage volume for a pond, and use the Storage Indication method command to calculate a routed hydrograph. You can create the routed hydrograph for the detention pond by using the Storage Indication Method. This command uses a post-development hydrograph, stage-storage curve, and stage-discharge curve (as well as an optional pre-development hydrograph for viewing in the multiple hydrographs plot) to route runoff.
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In this chapter
Using the Layout menu Creating intersections Creating cul-de-sacs Creating parking stalls Creating sports fields Creating walks and patios
Use the commands from the Layout menu to automate the process of creating intersections and to add details to site plans. Details can include intersections, cul-de-sacs, parking stalls, sports fields, and walks and patios.
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Creating Intersections
The Intersection commands from the Layout menu clean up lines where road alignments cross. Several intersection commands can be used to automate the intersection-creation procedure by breaking lines, where necessary, and filleting curves. Several geometric design issues need to be considered in creating intersections, including the horizontal and vertical alignment of the adjoining roads, location of sidewalks and utilities, and provision for adequate sight distance. The minimum distance for the driver to react and stop the vehicle before reaching an object in the road is known as stopping sight distance (SSD), and should be considered not only on horizontal and vertical curves, but on intersections as well.
TIP When you use the Intersection commands, linetypes that are not continuous, such as dotted or dashed lines, can cause problems. If a point of tangency falls at a line space, the command can fail. The commands are also sensitive to a zoom location. If all the offsets and distances appear correct, but an Intersection command is failing, you may need to zoom in or out of the intersection for the command to function properly.
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Key Concepts
Use continuous linetypes, instead of dotted or dashed lines, as you design alignments that meet in intersections. The Intersection commands can be used only for alignments with symmetrical left and right offsets. The width of intersecting roads must be the same. You can use AutoCAD commands, such as BREAK, TRIM, and FILLET, to create intersections when you do not want to use the automated Intersection commands, or when the intersecting roads are asymmetrical or have varying widths. You can place points manually along intersection geometry by using commands from the Points menu to create stakeout reports.
Creating Cul-de-Sacs
Cul-de-sacs are streets that are closed at one end, with a turnaround area at the closed end. You can use the Cul-de-sacs commands to create horizontal geometry automatically for the end of a cul-de-sac and to modify the setup and creation of cul-de-sacs off roadway tangents and curves. The Cul-de-sacs commands work only on line and arc objects, and not on polylines. If the alignment is a polyline, therefore, use the Alignment Import command to import the alignment as line and arc objects.
Key Concepts
The alignment used to create a cul-de-sac should be drawn using continuous linetypes. All cul-de-sac commands treat a single offset as the outer offset. The offset widths that you specify in the Cul-de-sac Settings dialog box must match the widths of the alignment offsets.
Creating Cul-de-Sacs
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Key Concepts
Parking Stall dimensions are set with the Parking Stalls Data command. The Parking Stalls Fit-On/Off command determines whether to fit the maximum number of stalls into a selected area. The Parking Stalls Label-On/Off command determines whether to label the stalls. Parking Stalls are created with the Parking Stalls Style command, which displays the Parking Stall Layout dialog box. From the dialog box, you can select the desired style and click OK to create the parking stalls.
Key Concepts
Sports fields are inserted as a combination of blocks, lines, and polylines. If you need to access or edit specific elements of sports fields, you can explode the blocks to break them into their component objects. In addition to the Sports Fields commands, the program includes additional commands to draw various track and field elements, such as long jump, triple jump, and pole vault areas. To access these commands from the Layout menu, choose Track and Field and select the track and field element you want to insert.
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Key Concepts
For Paver Walks and Brick Walks, you draw a centerline and assign a width to define the walk geometry. For Paver Patios and Brick Patios, you draw a boundary to define the patio geometry. If you do not create a closed boundary, the program closes the boundary for you. You must create at least two line segments for patio boundaries. You may need to experiment with hatch patterns and scales. Some hatch patterns may not function properly when the scales are set incorrectly; for example, when a walk width is too narrow for a certain hatch scale, the hatch may not be drawn. If you already have a boundary drawn, you can use the Walks and Patios Brick Hatching command.
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In this chapter
Viewing and editing roads in
You can generate a roadway profile by using an existing ground profile from a horizontal alignment and an existing ground surface. After you have created a roadway profile, you can modify and label it, and then create output files that export profile information.
profile view
Changing the profile settings Sampling the existing ground to
profiles
Creating finished ground
profiles
Superimposing vertical
alignment data
Editing vertical alignments Calculating vertical curve length
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Control How the existing ground data is sampled. Layers on which the existing ground profile graphics are placed. Layers on which the finished ground profile graphics and labels are placed.
Layer prefix for profile layers Text used in profile labels Label increments Vertical curve K values Passing, stopping, and headlight sight settings Label precision
Values
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surfaces, you must first create a file of the surface names using the Select Multiple Surfaces command. Then, before sampling the data, enable the multiple surfaces by selecting Toggle Multiple Surfaces. The Sample From Surface command accesses the files that were created when you originally generated the surface, and then creates a file containing existing ground elevations along the defined alignment. You can use the existing ground elevations to create an existing ground profile. The Sample From Surface command processes the profile information for a specified station range and displays the distance sampled in a statement similar to the following:
You have sampled profile for 3856.25 feet of alignment
The command creates a file for the current alignment with a .vrt extension in the following folder: c:\Land Projects <Version Number>\<project name>\align\ <alignment name> If a file with the same name already exists, then the command displays a confirmation prompt to overwrite the previous definition.
Before you create a profile, configure the profile settings. For more information, see Changing the Profile Settings on page 157. When you create a profile, an invisible block is inserted at the profile insertion point. This block contains information specific to that particular plot of the profile, including its location in the drawing, the vertical exaggeration, and the layer settings. This block also contains the Values settings for the profile; therefore, you must configure the settings before you use the Full Profile, Surface Profile, or Quick Profile commands.
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After you create the existing ground data for an alignment, you can generate a profile. Create a full profile to define a finished ground alignment, or to annotate the profile. A full profile, as shown in the following illustration, includes a datum line, datum elevation, existing ground, existing ground text, and grid base.
Or, you can create a quick profile, which is created without a horizontal or vertical grid base or station elevations, as shown in the following illustration.
If you sampled multiple surfaces, then you can create subsurface profiles. Usually you should create a full profile of the existing ground top surface, and then create subsurface profiles for any other surfaces you sampled using the Surface Profile command.
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Import the left and right profiles (if you sampled left and right offsets for the existing ground). Specify the station range and datum elevation for the profile. Control whether the profile is created from left to right, or from right to left. Control whether a grid is inserted with the profile.
NOTE By specifying the station range, you can import a subset of the entire
profile. When you define the finished ground profile definition, you should work with the entire length of the profile. A subset of the entire profile should be imported only for plotting purposes.
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Creating Existing Ground Profiles Setting the Current Layer for the Finished Ground Centerline
2 From the Profiles menu, choose FG Centerline Tangents Set Current Layer to set the current layer.
3 From the Profiles menu, choose FG Centerline Tangents Create Tangents to draw proposed tangents based on stations, elevations, lengths, and grades. You can adjust the AutoCAD crosshairs to a selected grade, if needed. To adjust the crosshairs, from the Profiles menu, choose FG Centerline Tangents Crosshairs @ Grade. This command affects the AutoCAD snap angle variable and turns Ortho mode on. It is important to remember that the vertical scale is based on the current setting in Drawing Setup. The program factors in this scale exaggeration automatically when you use the Create Tangents command. 4 From the Profiles menu, choose FG Vertical Curves to draw vertical curves for the finished ground centerline. Before creating vertical curves, set the current profile and draw the tangents for the finished ground centerline. All vertical curve commands place the curve on the same layer as the selected tangents. Creating Vertical Curves for the Finished Ground Centerline
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Before you use the Superimpose Profiles command, you must complete the following minimum requirements:
The destination profile must be plotted in the current drawing. The source alignment must be adjacent to the destination alignment and must have vertical alignment data defined for it.
Key Concepts
The Superimpose Profiles command provides a method to control the template transition elevations along a transition alignment as well as a method to show the relationship between profiles. There are two sections in the Superimpose Vertical Alignment dialog box: source vertical alignment and destination profile. In the source vertical alignment section, you select the horizontal alignment, an associated vertical alignment, and the spacing and station limits. In the destination profile section, you select the profile layer.
To superimpose alignments
Steps Use to locate
1 From the Alignments menu, choose Set Current Alignment Making an Alignment to make the correct alignment current. Current 2 If more than one drawing profile for the current alignment exists in the current drawing, then you are prompted to select the profile on which you want to plot the information. If only one drawing profile exists for the current alignment, it is selected automatically. 3 From the Profiles menu, choose Utilities Superimpose Profiles. In the Superimpose Vertical Alignment dialog box, you can select the horizontal alignment, the associated vertical alignment to plot on the destination profile, and the destination layer on which you want the profile lines plotted. Superimposing a Vertical Alignment onto a Different Profile
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Use the geometric calculator section to calculate vertical curve length based on empirical formulas. Use the lookup table section to calculate vertical curve length based on defined design speed and lookup tables. To use the lookup table section, you must first assign one or more design speeds to the alignment by using the Design Speed button in the top part of the Vertical Alignment Editor.
For more information about the vertical curve calculator, see Calculating Vertical Curve Length on page 166.
If the horizontal alignment is visible in the drawing, then the current PVI marker appears on the horizontal alignment as well as on the profile, making it easy to compare plan and profile PVI locations.
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You can control the display of the profile preview graphics, adjust the size and color of the current PVI marker, and adjust the color of the working profile and bounding boxes.
IMPORTANT The Vertical Alignment Editor is not linked dynamically to the drawing. You are prompted to import the finished ground centerline after you modify it, but you must manually re-import any other alignment offset you modify to update the drawing.
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Geometric calculator section Click this button to commit the curve length value to the vertical alignment.
In the geometric calculator section of the curve calculator, you can review information about crest and sag vertical curves for a selected PVI. For crest curves, the calculated K value, as well as passing and stopping sight distances, are shown for a specified curve length. For sag curves, the headlight sight distance is shown. You can enter a value for a stopping or passing sight distance and a K value, and the program calculates a corresponding curve length. The lookup table section of the calculator uses a series of separate ASCII text files, which you can edit, to compare vertical curve design information regarding the current finished ground PVI against the associated alignmentbased speed values. From these lookup tables, a list of minimum and maximum curve lengths are shown for the currently selected PVI.
Key Concepts
The geometric calculator section of the curve calculator calculates vertical curve length based on empirical values. If you know the intended design speed for the alignment, you can assign design speed values to the alignment and then use the lookup table section of the calculator to calculate curve length. To select a curve length that was calculated using a lookup table, doubleclick the value in the Length column. This sends the value to the Curve Length box in the geometric calculator section of the calculator, where you can round the value up or down and then commit the value to the vertical alignment.
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13
In this chapter
Viewing and editing roads in
To design a roadway in cross-sectional view, you can create a roadway template and then apply it to the plan alignment and profiles. As you work in section view, you can superelevate and transition the road to meet design requirements.
section view
Creating existing ground
cross sections
Working with templates Creating finished ground
cross sections
Viewing and editing cross
sections
Transitioning a roadway Superelevating a roadway
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Create existing ground cross sections for the alignment Create finished ground roadway surface templates Establish design parameters for ditches, superelevation, and transitions Extract, view, modify, and plot cross sections Insert cross sections in a drawing for plotting Output volumes using Average End Area or Prismoidal methods Place design roadway points in a drawing or external file for field staking Create a surface or other 3D data from a finished ground road design Create a 3D road grid of the alignment
The following is a brief summary of the design process for alignment cross sections: Design process for creating a cross section for an alignment
Step Creating existing ground data Description
Sample the data from one or more surfaces. Import the data from a text file. Enter the data into the Existing Ground Section Editor. You can create them at the same time as the top surface by sampling multiple surfaces or by sampling them from a text file. If you create cross sections from a single existing surface, then you can define the subsurfaces later by entering borehole data with Interpolation Control in the Existing Ground Section Editor.
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Editing templates
Superelevations
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Sample the data from one or more surfaces Sample the data from a text file that contains station/offset/elevation data Enter the data manually by using the Existing Ground Section Editor
As you sample the existing ground, elevational values for the cross sections are created. If you sample multiple surfaces, then you must first create a file of the surface names you want to sample using the Select Multiple Surfaces command, and then you can use multiple surfaces for sampling by using the Toggle Multiple Surfaces command. To control how the existing ground is sampled for cross section data, specify the section sampling settings, such as how much of the existing ground is sampled (the swath width), whether you are prompted to enter additional stations to sample, and whether sample lines are imported onto the plan view of the alignment. To specify sampling settings, choose Cross Sections Existing Ground Sample From Surface. The Section Sampling Settings dialog box is displayed, as shown in the following illustration.
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Key Concepts
You can plot sections that show existing ground conditions along the roadway. To create existing ground cross sections, you must define a road alignment. A design profile, however, is not required until you apply a template to the sections.
Sampling the Existing Ground Section Data from One Surface Creating the Existing Ground Cross Section Data From a Text File Choosing Which Cross Section Station to Edit or View
Use the Next option to view the cross sections as they progress along the alignment.
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5 You can plot a single section, a page of sections, or all sections by selecting a command from the Cross Sections Section Plot menu. Sections are plotted into the drawing based on the current horizontal and vertical scales.
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After you have created a template, you must define datum, superelevation, and transition points. You can also edit the template to change settings, such as subgrade depths and the shape of the template.
Drawing Templates
You can draw template surfaces using the Draw Template command or PLINE. As you use the Draw Template command, the vertical exaggeration of the drawing is automatically taken into account. If you use PLINE, however, you must keep in mind the vertical exaggeration as you draw the polylines. You can use the Draw Template command to draw both templates and subassemblies. This command uses 2D polylines based on offset, depth, grade, and slope parameters. You can draw either the template or the subassembly first. When you use the Define Template command, however, it attaches the subassembly to the template; therefore, you must define the subassembly first. For more information about the Define Template command, see Defining Templates on page 176.
NOTE Turn off running object snaps before using the Draw Template
command. As you draw template surfaces, you must consider whether the surfaces are normal or subgrade, and you must consider whether the template is symmetrical or asymmetrical. The following illustration shows an example of symmetrical and asymmetrical templates.
In a symmetrical template, the left and right halves are identical. As you define the template, you need to draw surfaces only on the left half. The left half is mirrored about a vertical plane that passes through the finished ground reference point and it creates the surfaces on the right half. A typical template can consist of normal surfaces, subgrade surfaces, or a combination of both. You can draw these surfaces symmetrically or asymmetrically. How they are drawn affects how you define the templates later
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on. Normal surfaces are the elements of the template that make up the upper part of the template, such as pavement surfaces, median islands, shoulders and curbs. A typical subgrade surface is made up of granular substances, such as gravel. The following illustration shows normal and subgrade surfaces on a template. Many of the subgrade surface parameters are defined using the Define Template command instead of the Draw Template command.
Defining Templates
After you draw a template, you can define it by using the Define Template command. This command can have varying prompts, depending on whether the template you are defining is composed of normal or subgrade surfaces. If you define a template with only normal surfaces, specify a finished ground reference point, a datum line, and connection-points-out. You can also add subassemblies to the template definition. The reference point is the point on the template that controls the placement of the template horizontally and vertically on the sections. This is usually the crown of the road. The datum line is compared against the existing ground surface to calculate the cut and fill areas. The connection-point-out is a point on each side of the roadway, usually the furthest point from the centerline, where the defined template stops and match slopes or ditch slopes begin, based on design control and existing conditions. The following illustration identifies these elements for a template with only a normal surface.
When you define a template with a subgrade surface, you are not prompted to define connection points, a datum line, or whether to attach subassemblies. The connection points are defined automatically at the outer end of the drawn portion of the subgrade, and the datum lines are generated automati-
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cally along the bottom of each subgrade layer. Each datum line is numbered in ascending order, starting from the lowest subgrade on the template. Before you define templates, do the following:
Set the template storage path by using the Set Template Path command. This is a project-based setting that ensures all drawings associated with a project use the same path. Draw the template surfaces as 2D polylines with either the Draw Template command or PLINE. When templates consist of only normal surfaces, define the subassemblies to be attached. Draw subassemblies as if they were being attached to the left side of the template.
After you define templates and subassemblies, you can then use them in any project. If you use previously-defined templates, make sure to specify the correct template path. To view the completed template, use the Import Template command. To add transition and superelevation regions to a template, or to add datum lines and top surfaces, use the Edit Template command.
Editing Templates
You can redefine a cross section template, or you can create a new template from an existing template, using the Edit Template command. After the command imports the template into the drawing, you can do the following:
Modify connection, superelevation, transition, top surface, or breakline and datum points Add or delete surfaces Modify surface points Add point codes Attach subassemblies
The template is drawn on the current layer using the vertical scale factor determined by the vertical scale that you specified with the Drawing Setup command when you created the drawing.
NOTE If you use the Edit Template command to define template features such
as point codes, transitions or superelevation, you can save time by using the Endpoint (endp) running object snap.
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When you use the Edit Template command to add surfaces, it creates two polylines for each surface: one for the left side and one for the right side. The command also displays any attached subassemblies. Although they cannot be modified, subassemblies can be attached to the current template. To use the Edit Template command, the template and its subassemblies must be in the folder that you specified with the Set Template Path command.
NOTE Use the Edit Template command for both symmetrical and asymmetrical templates. In symmetrical templates, the command does not mirror the surface edits from the left to right side. If you want it to remain a symmetrical template, you must change both sides of the template.
Key Concepts
To apply transition and superelevation regions on a template, you must modify the template after you define it. To insert points into a drawing based on template points, such as the right-of-way and edge-of-pavement, you can use template point codes.
2 To use a subassembly for a curb or shoulder, use the Draw Defining Subassemblies Template command to draw the subassembly. Then, from the Cross Sections menu, choose Templates Define Subassembly to define the subassembly. 3 From the Cross Sections menu, choose Templates Edit Material Table to set up the Material Table. A material table is a collection of surface material names that you can select as you are defining template surfaces. 4 From the Cross Sections menu, choose Templates Define Template to define the template. In this step, you can define the finished ground reference point, the template geometry, the surface materials, and the depths of subgrade surfaces. You also attach subassemblies (optional) to the template at this point. Defining Templates Defining and Editing a Material Table
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Editing Templates
Define a horizontal alignment Sample the existing ground profile from either a surface or from a file Define the vertical alignment for the finished centerline Sample the existing ground cross sections from either the surface or a file
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Key Concepts
You can use two methods to modify the cross sections after you process them. You can use the Edit Design Control command to modify a range of cross sections, or you can use the View/Edit Sections command to change individual sections. If you want to apply superelevation or transition control to finished ground cross sections, the template must contain transition and superelevation control locations. You define these locations using the Edit Template command. You can then apply superelevation factors and specify vertical and horizontal transitions when widening or altering the roadways characteristics. You can use two methods to process cross sections. If you change any of the cross section design control when you are using the Edit Design Control command, then the sections are processed automatically as you exit the command. You can also process cross sections manually by choosing Cross Sections Design Control Process Sections.
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Using the Edit Design Control Command to Process and Edit the Cross These parameters control the template you can use when Sections processing cross sections, ditch values, slope control values, transitions, and superelevation. Whenever you modify the design control parameters, the cross sections are processed automatically.
6 You can view and modify individual cross sections by selecting Cross Sections View/Edit Sections. This is the recommended method for modifying superelevation regions. 7 Plot the cross sections using one of the Cross Sections Section Plot commands.
Key Concepts
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Depth control slopes use different slopes in cut and fill for various depth ranges. These are based on the depth slope tables that you can create by choosing Design Control Depth Slope from the Cross Sections menu. This option determines the depth of cut or fill for each section, and then uses the appropriate slope. You can apply benching to simple slopes or depth control slopes based on height criteria. You can define the width and grade of the bench. Stepped control slopes are a variation on depth control slopes. This slope, instead of finding the appropriate value for the current depth and applying it as a constant, changes as it passes through each depth range. Surface control slopes can be applied only in cut situations and are based on the different existing ground surfaces that they pass through.
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The following command prompt is displayed when you use the View/Edit Sections command. You can use the Next, Previous, and Station options to move to a section you want to view or modify.
Edits that you make to individual cross sections with the View/Edit Sections command are not overridden when you apply different cross section factors to a range of sections with the Edit Design Control command. For example, if you modify the superelevation of three cross sections, and then apply ditch control to the entire range of sections, the superelevation changes you made are not lost. However, if you modify the superelevation of three cross sections and then apply superelevation parameters to the entire range of cross sections, the changes that you made to the three cross sections are overridden.
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Transitioning a Roadway
To transition a road from one set of dimensions to another, you can create plan and profile transition regions on the finished roadway design. For example, if the highway design includes a passing lane on a hill, you can add the additional lane to the plan view of the roadway, define the edge of pavement as a transition alignment, and then update the cross sections using the Edit Design Control command. You can also design vertical alignments in profile view that represent vertical transitions, subgrade surfaces, or ditch elevations, and then you can attach these vertical alignments to the cross sections, updating them with the new elevations.
Key Concepts
Define transition control points on the template using the Edit Template command. You can create horizontal and vertical transition alignments, and then attach them to the cross sections using the Edit Design Control command. You can use commands in the Cross Sections Ditch/Transition menu to define plan and profile transition alignments. You can also use commands in the Alignments and Profiles menus to define and modify these transition alignments. If you make changes to the transition alignments using the View/Edit Sections command or the Edit Design Control command, then you can use the Cross Sections Ditch/Transition Import commands to import these transition alignments back into the plan or profile views.
To transition a roadway
Steps 1 Draw and define the finished ground template. 2 From the Cross Sections menu, choose Templates Edit Template to place transition points on the template. 3 To apply the template to the cross sections, from the Cross Sections menu, choose Design Control Edit Design Control and then click Template Control. Use to locate
Defining Templates Defining the Template Transition Regions Specifying the Design Control Values for Templates
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Defining a Ditch or Transition as a Horizontal Alignment Defining a Ditch or Transition as a Vertical Alignment Attaching the Horizontal Transitions to Cross Sections Using Ditch or Transition Profiles when Processing the Cross Sections
5 To apply the transition alignments to the template, from the Cross Sections menu, choose Design Control Edit Design Control. To attach horizontal alignments, click Attach Alignments. To attach profiles, click Attach Profiles. Click OK to exit the Edit Design Control dialog box, and the cross sections are updated automatically with the transition information.
6 You can modify individual cross sections, if needed, using Changing the Left and the Cross Sections View/Edit Sections command. Right Transition Regions Importing a Ditch or 7 To update the vertical alignment with the changes that Transition from the Sections you made to the cross sections, you can choose Ditch/ Transition Import Profile from the Cross Sections menu, into a Profile and then import the transition line into the profile. To update the horizontal alignment with the changes that Importing a Ditch or Transition from the Sections you made to the cross sections, you can choose Ditch/ into the Plan View Transition Import Plan Lines from the Cross Sections menu and import the horizontal transition into the plan view. 8 To update the alignment database, redefine the imported Defining a Ditch or a horizontal and vertical alignments. Transition as a Horizontal Alignment Defining a Ditch or a Transition as a Vertical Alignment
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Superelevating a Roadway
Superelevation occurs on roadways where the horizontal alignment curves and the road must bank to accommodate the speeds of automobiles. As a car approaches a curve, the roadway cross slope changes until the roadway reaches a full superelevated state, and then the cross slope returns to normal as the car exits the curve. To define superelevation for roads, define superelevation regions on a roadway template. You can also use the Superelevation Parameters command to modify the design control for superelevation. To modify superelevation one cross section at a time, you can use the View/Edit Sections command.
Key Concepts
To apply superelevation to cross sections, you must use the Edit Template command to place superelevation control points on the roadway surface template. To add sampled cross sections at key superelevation stations, you must sample cross sections prior to applying superelevation, apply superelevation parameters, and then use the Superelevation Section Sampling dialog box.
To superelevate a roadway
Steps 1 From the Cross Sections menu, choose Templates Edit Template to define the superelevation regions on the finished ground template. 2 To apply the template to the cross sections, from the Cross Sections menu, choose Design Control Edit Design Control, and then click Template Control. 3 To modify the superelevation curve parameters, from the Cross Sections menu, choose Design Control Superelevation Parameters. Use to locate
Specifying the Design Control Values for Templates Changing the Superelevation Control Values
In the Superelevation Control dialog box, you can select a Editing, Inserting, or method of superelevation to use, change the subgrade Deleting a Superelevated superelevation values, and so on. Curve 4 You can generate a report of cross section information by Outputting the clicking Output in the Superelevation Control dialog box. Superelevation Data
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Use the Create Road Surface command to create surface data from a road design. You can either create a new surface from the data or add the data to an existing surface.
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Use the Draw 3D Polylines From Point Codes command to create 3D polylines that connect all points that have the same point code along an alignment. Use the Draw Daylight 3D Polyline command to create a closed 3D polyline that represents the locations where the road top surface matches into the existing ground surface. The 3D polyline is created by connecting the cross section catch points along the alignment. You can also create a 3D grid of the roadway by selecting Cross Sections 3D Grid. You can use the grid data in a surface by selecting it as 3D Faces.
Key Concepts
The surface data that is created when you use the Create Road Surface command can be created as breaklines, a point file, or both. The surface boundary is created by connecting the catch points along the alignment. You can use the Draw 3D Polylines From Point Codes command in conjunction with the Draw Daylight 3D Polyline command to create a surface using the Terrain Model Explorer Define by Polyline command to define the 3D polylines as breaklines. Use the polyline created by the Draw Daylight 3D Polyline command to define the surface boundary.
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14
In this chapter
Overview of designing
Use the Pipes commands to create conceptual and finished pipe runs in plan and profile views. Begin a pipe design by laying out conceptual plan and profile pipe runs. Then, import finished draft pipe runs to create symbols and labels.
pipe runs
Drawing and defining
profile view
Editing pipe runs graphically Working with the Pipes
Run Editor
Drafting finished pipe runs in
plan view
Drafting finished pipe runs in
profile view
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Design and draft sanitary and storm water sewer systems in both plan and profile views. Perform flow, velocity, depth, slope, and other types of analyses to satisfy a variety of design conditions using the Pipes Run Editor. Determine hydraulic and energy grade line elevations for a system. Size the pipe segments and adjust run variables with the Pipes Run Editor.
Some terms used in this chapter are described below. Node An intersection of individual pipes, or the end of one individual pipe, in a defined pipe run. In a sanitary sewer design, the node is typically represented by a structure such as a manhole. An entity that connects two unique nodes. A collective group of pipes and nodes. A pipe run has a minimum of two nodes connected by a pipe. The physical definition of a node, such as a catch basin, manhole, or an item at the end of a pipe.
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2 Click Node to display the Node Data Settings dialog box. Changing the Default Node Data Settings These settings control the node name and structure reference description and node head losses. Make changes to the settings, as necessary, and then click OK. 3 After you have made all the changes to the pipe settings, click OK. 4 From the Pipes menu, choose Define Pipe Runs Draw Pipe Run, and then enter a new pipe run name. Select a terrain model (when a surface is defined in a project). You can use this surface to extract rim elevations for the manhole structures located at each pipe run node. You are prompted to turn the current surface on or off. If you want to enter elevations manually, click Off to turn off the surface. If you want to extract elevations from the surface, click On. 5 If you are basing the run on an existing roadway horizontal alignment, then select an alignment and place the first point of the pipe run by specifying the station and offset from the alignment. If you are drawing the run manually, then specify the first point by picking a point in the drawing or by entering its northing/easting coordinates. Drawing and Defining Pipe Runs
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7 Enter the first points rim elevation (when it is not being extracted from the current terrain model). 8 Add the next point by station and offset or by manually picking the point. 9 Continue adding points in the pipe run. 10 Type S to save your changes to the database. The Run Alignment Association dialog box is displayed 11 Select an alignment option. You can create an alignment from the pipe run you just drew, or you can associate the pipe run with an existing alignment or the current alignment. If you select the Create an Alignment from Run option, then you are prompted to select the alignment start point and the entities that make up the pipe run alignment. This alignment is saved to the alignment database, and you can use this alignment for drafting the pipe run in profile view.
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Key Concepts
Before you define a profile, you must have a defined alignment for the pipe run. Draft a profile in a drawing for the alignment that you are associating with the pipe run. The profile is drawn based on default pipe depths and dimensions listed in the Pipe Data Settings dialog box, which can be accessed from the Pipes Settings Editor dialog box. Pipe runs are stationed in the same direction in which they are drawn.
2 From the Alignments menu, choose Set Current Alignment to select the alignment that you associated with the pipe run or that you created from the pipe run. 3 From the Profiles menu, choose Create Profile Full Profile to create a full profile of the defined alignment. 4 From the Pipes menu, choose Settings Edit to display the Pipes Settings Editor.
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5 Click Profile in the Layer Data section to display the Profile Changing the Profile Layer Layer Settings dialog box, and review the names to be Settings for Pipes used for the profile layers. 6 From the Pipes menu, choose Conceptual Profile Import Run to import the run into the profile. A conceptual profile is drawn, as shown in the following illustration. Importing Conceptual Pipe Runs into Profile View
7 You can modify the pipes and nodes of the conceptual profile view from the Pipes menu, by choosing Conceptual Profile Edit Graphical. If you prefer to modify data using a tabular editor, then from the Pipes menu, choose Conceptual Profile Edit Data.
Editing Conceptual Pipe Runs in Profile View Editing Conceptual Profile Pipe Runs Using the Pipe Run Editor
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Drawing and Defining Pipe Runs Editing Conceptual Pipe Runs in Plan View
2 From the Pipes menu, choose Conceptual Plan Edit Graphical. 3 Select the run that you want to modify by selecting it from the drawing, or by pressing ENTER and selecting its name from the dialog box. In this example, you are using the DBase option to change a node name. 4 Move to the node that you want to change by using the Next or Prev options. 5 Type DB to display the Edit Run Node dialog box. 6 Select the NAME: <name> row. 7 Enter a new name for the node in the Edit box, and then click OK. You can use the DBase option to modify elevations, pipe materials, dimensions, and so on. 8 Type S to save the change to the pipe run database.
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You can choose the columns of information that you want to display in the Pipes Run Editor. You can select one of the defined views from the View list to view specific column groupings. For example, you can pick the Node view to view the columns that only pertain to nodes. Changes that you make in relevant cells of the spreadsheet affect data in other parts of the spreadsheet. For example, increasing the flow rate values in the Pipe Flow column results in increases in the values found in the Pipe Size column, as well as changes to values in the Design Flow, Design Velocity, and Design Depth columns.
Key Concepts
Pipe run nodes are listed by northing/easting coordinates, station and offset (if applicable), and node labels. Structures at nodes are listed with rim and sump elevations, node and sump drop values, and structure type and dimensions, including structure wall thickness values.
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Pipe segments are listed with pipe size (diameter), start and finish invert elevations, slope, drop, and flow values, as well as roughness coefficients for use in Manning, Darcy-Weisbach, and Hazen-Williams pipe flow calculations formulae. Critical flow and depth values for each pipe segment are listed. Contributing flow data from one or two laterals is listed, with lateral names, discharge point invert elevations, and flow values.
3 Under Node Drafting Labels, click Plan to establish the finished plan node settings.
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1 If you do not have a profile currently drafted in a drawing Creating a Complete Profile for the pipe run alignment (or the alignment that you associated with the pipe run), then from the Profile menu, choose Create Profile Full Profile to draw the profile. 2 From the Pipes menu, choose Settings Edit to display the Pipes Settings Editor dialog box. 3 Under Pipes Drafting Labels, click Profile to establish the finished profile pipe settings. Changing the Label Settings for Finished Draft Pipes in Profile View
4 Under Node Drafting Labels, click Profile to establish the finished profile node settings. 5 From the Pipes menu, choose Finish Draft Profile Draw Pipe Run. Select the pipe run or press ENTER to display the Defined Runs dialog box, then select the run. Creating Finished Draft Runs in Profile View
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In this chapter
Creating plan, profile, and cross
You can use Sheet Manager commands to automate the creation of plan, profile, and cross section sheets. When you use a sheet style customized for the project, you can quickly generate updated sheets with complete annotation as the project data changes.
section sheets
Getting started with plan/
profile sheets
Sheet Manager terminology Setting up a plan/profile
sheet style
Frames Creating a plan/profile
sheet series
Creating a section sheet series
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Plan/Profile Sheets: A series of sheets generated for an alignment and profile. Each plan/profile sheet contains a station range of the profile and the corresponding plan view. Profile Sheets: A series of sheets generated for sequential station ranges of a profile. Cross Section Sheets: A series of sheets generated for cross sections. Each cross section sheet contains multiple cross sections, based on the number of cross sections that fit within a section frame for the specified scale.
To create plan and profile sheets, the alignment and profile must be present in the drawing. To correctly label finish draft pipe runs, they must also be present in the drawing. In contrast, cross section sheets are based on the cross sections that exist in the project database, not on cross sections that may be plotted in the drawing. The process of creating sheets can be simple or advanced, depending on whether you use sheet style templates that are provided with the program or whether you customize a sheet style to use additional label styles.
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You can load these sheets in AutoCAD Land Desktop and use the standard AutoCAD plot commands to plot the sheets, or you can set up a batch plot to plot multiple sheets at a time. The generated sheets reference the entities in the project from which they are generated. Therefore, to open the sheets, you must open a drawing associated with the project from which the sheets were generated, and then use the Load Sheet commands from the Sheet Manager menu to view the generated sheets.
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In plan/profile sheet series, the view definitions are positioned over the horizontal alignment, as shown in the following illustration.
The dimensions of the view definitions are based on the viewport dimensions of the sheet style you select. Default sheets styles provided with the program are located in the AutoCAD Land Desktop \data\sheets folder.
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Frame Component
Laying Out
Layout Mode
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Sheet Style
A pre-defined template used for generating sheets. A sheet style determines the location and scale of the alignment, profile, or cross sections, and also determines how they are labeled. You set up sheet styles in paper space at 1:1 scale. A sheet style typically contains a border, a title block, viewports, frames, and label styles. A rectangular polyline that is placed over the plan or profile when you lay out a sheet series. A view definition controls what sections of the alignment and profile are plotted on each sheet. The dimensions of the view definition are based on the dimensions of the associated sheet style viewport. Viewports are part of a plan/profile or profile sheet style. A viewport is a paper space entity that corresponds to the model space view definition, and is assigned a category that determines whether it is a plan or profile viewport.
View Definition
Viewport
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4 From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Sheet Styles Set Viewport Category to set the viewport category to either plan or profile. This specifies the viewport for plan and the viewport for profile. Use this command to also set the scale of the viewport. The scale should match the scale of the drawing in which the plan and profile are drafted.
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Creating a Text Label Categories and Codes for Text, Block, and Distance Labels
7 From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Sheet Styles Create/Edit Frame to attach label styles to the frames. 8 From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Sheet Styles Save Sheet Style to save the sheet style to the sheet style directory. Be sure to give the sheet style a unique name so you dont overwrite the sheet style you opened originally. You can then select the sheet style when you lay out a new sheet series.
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Code
To get started with text label styles, try examining and using the label styles and sheet styles provided with the program to see how the label styles are set up and attached to frames. For more information about frames, see the following section. Additional styles or frame components that you can set up include Block, Distance, and Grid styles. Block labels insert symbols, distance labels insert dimension labels, and grid styles insert grids onto generated sheets.
Frames
To use label styles you must attach them to the frames on the sheet styles. Typically you attach labels to two different types of frames: label frames and view frames. Label frames are frames positioned adjacent to viewports on the sheet. View frames are frames that are co-linear with the viewports on the sheet. You attach labels to view frames when you want to create labels on the model space entities, such as when you want to create alignment station labels.
Frames
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The following illustration shows view frames for the plan and profile viewports, and label frames positioned adjacent to the profile viewport.
Two other frame types, table and section, are used when creating section sheet styles and when labeling non-graphical data, such as volumes. The following is a brief summary of the various frame types. Label Frame Positions labels to the sides, above, or below profiles and cross sections. Typical labels inserted in label frames include station and elevation along the bottom of a profile or the grid elevations on the sides of the profile. Positions labels directly over the alignment or profile. Typical labels inserted in view frames include plan view alignment stationing or profile vertical curve information. Used to create non-graphical labels on sheets, such as area and volume information about cross section sheets. Defines how cross sections are positioned on a sheet.
View Frame
Table Frame
Section Frame
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Key Concepts
The layout of a plan/profile sheet is determined by the length of profile that can be displayed per sheet. The plan view is then aligned to coincide with the profile view. After you generate sheets, you can use commands in the Sheet Tools menu to copy model space entities to paper space, to rotate annotation, and to update labels based on changes to the label styles or to the model space entities.
The following steps describe the process of creating a plan/profile sheet series in greater detail. To create a plan/profile sheet series
Steps Use to locate
1 From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Settings to set the Changing Sheet Manager Sheet Manager settings. Settings For plan/profile sheets, you can specify the layer names, whether the sheets are generated with fixed profile stations, and so on. 2 Select the current alignment and profile. Making an Alignment Current Making a Profile Current 3 From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Plan/Profile Sheets Layout Sheet Series to display the Set Current Sheet Series Name dialog box. 4 Enter a name for the new series, and then click OK to display the Edit Sheet Series dialog box. 5 Set up the sheet series options. These options include the sheet style that you want to use, the starting sheet number, and the sheet overlap distance. Laying Out a Plan/Profile Sheet Series
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7 Edit the layout, if necessary, from the Sheet Manager menu, by choosing Plan/Profile Sheets Edit Sheet Layout. You can move and rotate the view definitions that were placed over the alignment to control the parts of the alignment and profile that appear on each sheet. 8 From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Plan/Profile Sheets Generate Sheet Series to generate the sheet series. 9 You can view one sheet at a time by loading it. From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Plan/Profile Sheets Load Sheet Individual. The Sheet Manager Plan/Profile Load Sheet Series command can load up to 255 sheets into the current drawing. Each sheet is placed on its own layout tab. 10 From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Plot Edit Batch Plot Job to select a group of sheets to plot. 11 From the Sheet Manager menu, choose Plot Run Batch Plot Job to plot the sheets.
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Key Concepts
A section sheet style must have one Section/View frame and one Section/ Section frame. A section sheet style can have any number of label and table frames. You can use table frames to position labels on section sheets that do not have design-specific locations, such as volume calculations. The easiest way to generate section sheets is to use a predefined section sheet style. There are predefined sheet styles in the \data\sheets folder. For example, you can use the cross section sheet named xs100m.dwg in the \data\sheets\metric folder.
It is very important to define the section sheet settings when you are generating section sheets. For example, make sure to configure the horizontal scale correctly so that the section swath width that you sampled fits on the sheets.
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The following illustration shows the settings that affect the layout of generated cross section sheets.
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16
In this chapter
Survey features
The features described in this chapter are available when you install AutoCAD Civil 3D Land Desktop Companion 2009. The stand-alone version of AutoCAD Land Desktop does not include these features.
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17
In this chapter
Accessing Survey Tools Survey settings
This chapter describes how to access the survey tools and establish the drawing and data file settings.
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Survey Settings
You can establish the settings for a Survey drawing from the Edit Settings dialog box and Data Files Settings dialog box.
TIP The survey tools have an interface that you can use for managing and editing survey control point data, survey setup data, survey observation data, and survey figure data. For more information, see Survey Toolspace and Panorama in the online Help.
The settings are arranged by program so that you can easily locate the settings that apply to a project. There are settings for AutoCAD Land Desktop, civil engineering tools (Civil Design) settings, and survey tools (Survey) settings. These settings are available elsewhere in the program; however, the Edit Settings dialog box provides an easy way to change different settings simultaneously and then save them back to a prototype. By saving the settings to
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a prototype, the settings are used automatically whenever you create a new drawing in a project that is based on that prototype. You can establish the settings once and then apply them to each new drawing.
Key Concepts
The drawing settings are controlled on a drawing-by-drawing basis unless you save them back to the prototype on which the project is based. This is designed so that individual drawings in a project can have different settings. The default drawing settings are based on the project prototype that you select when you create a project. If you change the drawing settings, then you can save them back to the prototype and use them for new drawings that you create. If you change the drawing settings for a drawing, only new objects are affected. Existing objects are not updated with the new drawing settings.
Survey Settings
221
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18
In this chapter
Entering survey data The Survey observation
This chapter has information about the different methods provided in the survey feature that you can use to enter data into a drawing.
database
Entering observed data Using the Traverse and
Sideshot Editors
223
Download data from a data collector. Create field book filestext files that contain the observed point data which you can import into a drawing. Convert raw files, created using previous versions of survey, into field book files, and then import the files into a drawing. Use menu commands to define baselines, centerlines, and intersections. Input survey data and create figures using the Survey Command Line.
Process and correct the information, and then balance and adjust the traverses and sideshot data. Display angle and bearing information about existing points. Create figures. Identify and query these figures for closure, bearing, and distance report information, or use the figures as surface breaklines.
TIP The Survey Toolspace interface enables you to view, manage, and edit the
traverse network and figures as well as edit individual observations. For more information, see Survey Toolspace and Panorama in the online Help.
The station points where you set up the instrument and obtained sightings of other locations around the traverse, recording direction and distance (which gives you the point locations).
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The sideshot data, such as manhole and hydrant locations, positions along features such as driveways, top and bottom of slopes, drainage ditches, and corner locations of buildings. Equipment settings for the survey instrument.
You can enter observations from a data collector or total station, Traverse or Sideshot Editor dialog boxes, menu commands, or the Survey Command Line. Regardless of the method you use, all the observation data used to create the points is stored in the observation database. The observation database is stored in the project folder, c:\Land Projects <Version Number>\<project name>\survey\<project name>.odb. All the point data (northing, easting, elevation, and description) goes into the point database, c:\Land Projects <Version Number>\<project name>\cogo\points.mdb. You can modify observation data. For example, if you need to make adjustments to the traverse loop for closure, you can adjust the observations by using a traverse adjustment or Least Squares methods. When you make traverse adjustments, the coordinates you reduce from the field book file are updated in the drawing and in the project point database.
Download data from a data collector, making a field book file that you can import. Import a batch file of point and observation data. Use the Survey Command Line to enter information using the Survey Command Language. Use the Survey Toolspace. Use the Traverse and Sideshot Editors. Use the menu commands.
You may want to experiment with several methods to find the one best for you.
225
Key Concepts
When locating survey data, make sure the collector is recording raw angles and distances. You can use description key codes in the field to automatically plot symbols at point locations. When setting up the communication, the settings for the collector and the collector program that you are using in Survey (Survey Link DC, or Geodimeter) must be set the same.
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The program recognizes a closed traverse by ending on the same point number you started the traverse with. The program recognizes an open traverse by ending on a different point than the point at which you started the traverse. You can import existing raw data files into a drawing. From the Data Collection/Input menu choose the Convert Pre-7.6 Raw Files command. After you start the DC Link program, you can access documentation for the program by choosing Help Index. While entering information at the Survey Command Line, you can record your entries in a batch file. After you create a batch file, you can edit it, and then use the Run Batch File command to import the data into the drawing and database.
2 Set the communication parameters in the Survey Link DC Working with Data program and in the collector. Collection Link If you have specific questions about the use of the program, use the Survey Link DC Help. 3 Transfer the raw data from the data collector to your computer. 4 Convert the raw data to make a field book. 5 From the Data Collection/Input menu, choose Edit Field Book to edit the field book to correct any mistakes. Editing a Field Book File
6 From the Data Collection/Input menu, choose Import Importing an Existing Field Field Book to import the field book and plot the surveyed Book data.
227
Establish equipment settings. Create, edit, and list points. Create figures, intersections, and centerlines. Enter traverse and side shot observations.
To quickly access the Survey Command Language when the Survey Command Line is active, type help to display a list of commands that you can use to enter your information. This file lists the following command syntax you must use to complete the command:
Anything in ( ) parentheses is optional. Anything in [ ] brackets is required. You must separate each item with a space.
For example, the Angle Distance command syntax is: AD VA (point) [angle] [distance] [vert angle] (descript) If you type AD VA, then a point number (optional), you must include the angle, distance, and vertical angle. You can also enter an optional description for the point.
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Key Concepts
When you enter observations using the Survey Command Language, you can start by setting up your station and backsight points on existing points in your drawing. If the points do not exist, then you are prompted to enter known northing/easting/elevation coordinates. You can enter observation data directly into a text file. Type the information into a text editor, such as Microsoft Notepad, using the Survey Command Language. From the Data Collection/Input menu, choose the Import Field Book File command to place the observations into your drawing. To record each entry you make at the Survey Command Line, select the Use Batch File check box in the Survey Command Settings dialog box (available from the Edit Settings dialog box). This creates a file that you can edit if you make mistakes. You can then run the batch file to update the drawing with the correct information.
229
4 Select the Use Batch File check box. 5 Enter a batch file name. 6 Click OK.
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Running a Survey Batch File in Slow Motion Walking Through a Survey Batch File
TIP The new Survey Toolspace interface enables you to view, manage, and edit
the traverse network and figures as well as edit individual observations. For more information, see Survey Toolspace and Panorama in the online Help.
Key Concepts
The Traverse Editor can work with open or closed traverses. You can use this editor to calculate level loops with no distances. You can use different observation techniques such as turned angles or observed bearings to locate different points. You can enter multiple observations. Points do not have to exist in the project to create a traverse. You can define the points as you begin.
231
The Traverse Editor has an option you can use to create a field book file from the data that you enter into the dialog box. You can enter traverse data through the Traverse Editor, Survey Command Line, field books, batch files, data collectors, and Traverse entry menu selections.
Key Concepts
You can use different observation techniques to locate different points. For example, some observations can be turned angles, and others can be observed bearings. You can enter multiple observations for each setup and station. You can enter sideshot data through the Sideshot Editor, Survey Command Line, field books, batch files, data collectors, and Sideshot menu selections.
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Entering Observations
19
In this chapter
Editing and adjusting
This chapter describes different methods for adjusting a traverse and how to use figures to represent the linework in a survey project.
survey data
Adjusting a traverse Working with figures Creating breaklines from figures Drawing the traverse/
topology route
233
TIP The Survey Toolspace interface enables you to view, manage, and edit the
traverse network and figures as well as edit individual observations. You can preview figures and also flag specific figures to use as surface modeling breaklines. For more information, see Survey Toolspace and Panorama in the online Help.
Adjusting a Traverse
When you adjust a traverse, all the directions and distances along the traverse loop are calculated to establish traverse point coordinates. For a closed traverse loop, the endpoint should match the start point. The traverse loop may not close exactly because of instrument inaccuracy and human error, but if it closes within a user-specified tolerance, then you can adjust the traverse. Survey provides four methods to adjust traverse information:
Compass Rule: A corrections method where the closing errors are assumed to be as much due to errors in observed angles as errors in measured distances. The closing errors in latitude and departure are distributed according to the ratio of the length of the line to the total length of the traverse. Crandall Rule: A method of balancing a traverse where all the angular error is distributed throughout the traverse and all adjustments to the traverse are due to modifying the traverse distances. The modification distance made to each leg is such that the sum of the squares is a minimum. Corrections corresponding to the closing errors assume that the closing errors are random and normally distributed, and that all the angular error has been adjusted prior to the adjustment routine.
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Transit Rule: A method of balancing a traverse where the closing errors are assumed to be caused less by the errors in the observed angles than by the errors in measured distance. Corrections are distributed according to the ratio of the latitude and departure of each leg of the traverse to the sums of the latitude and departures of the entire traverse. Least Squares: A method of balancing a traverse. The squares of the differences between the unadjusted and adjusted measurements (angles and distances) are summed and reduced to a minimum. This method weights the individual measurements according to the specifications set in the Equipment Correction settings to determine the source of error. You can adjust the data for either an individual traverse loop or a traverse network, if located from multiple observations.
Key Concepts
Traverses can be adjusted to correct closure error. Any adjustment can update sideshots and figures located from that traverse. At each step in the adjustment process, you can print the results to analyze and review. Least Square adjustments can be two dimensional or three dimensional. You can manually adjust traverse data that you enter using the Traverse Editor, Survey Command Line, field books, batch files, data collector, or Traverse/Sideshot menu commands.
TIP Using the Survey Toolspace interface, you can preview figures and also
obtain inverse and mapcheck information for figures. For more information, see Survey Toolspace and Panorama in the online Help. You can easily create figures as you enter data into your data collector. The format for figure entry differs for various data collectors but you can enter all figure commands into your data collector and then transfer this information into a field book file.
235
By using figure names with figure prefixes, you can simplify the process of turning observed data into lines and curves in a drawing. If you plan to query a figure, such as perform a mapcheck on a figure that represents a particular parcel, then you should give it a unique name. By referring to the figure name, you can use the figure commands to do the following:
Continue a figure Offset a figure Inverse a figure to list its courses and area Mapcheck the figure to determine its closure List the figure area
Figure prefixes control which layer each figure is drawn on. You can establish figure prefixes in the Survey Prefix Library. When you assign a name to a figure and a prefix match is found in the Figure Prefix Library, the figure is automatically placed on the correct layer. Using the Survey Toolspace Figure Inquiry commands you can display the figures, list figure names, and check the figure for closure information. For more information see, Survey Toolspace and Panorama in the online Help.
Key Concepts
To begin a figure, either select Analysis/Figures Figure Creation or type Figure Creation commands directly at the Survey Command Line. You can also enter Figure commands and figure names directly into a data collector. All figures are polylines with extended entity data. If more than one figure has the same name, then some commands may not be able to find the correct figure. For example, to use the Centerline or Baseline commands, a figure must have a unique name. You can use figures as surface breaklines. You can use figures to calculate closure information. You can create figures by referencing observed points in point-to-point mode (as if you were walking around the figure), or you can create figures by entering data in cross section format. For example, you can collect points for edge of pavement, centerline, and edge of pavement, and then move up 50 feet and collect points for the next cross section.
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Key Concepts
Using the Draw Traverse Topology Route command, you can distinguish the key set up points from the other shots on your drawing and visually confirm the correct points are occupied. You can right click on a Network Collection in the Survey Toolspace to draw the topology.
237
238
Chapter 19
A
accessing commands, 18 civil engineering tools menus, 121 alignment editing, 164 profile, 161, 164 superimposing profiles, 162 alignment database, 84 alignments, 84 editing, 88 exporting as LandXML data, 113 importing as LandXML data, 115 listing, 101 making current, 87 making into one object, 86 offsetting, 89 stationing, 89 annotation, sheet styles, 209 ARX objects, 31 bounding box, 32 ASCII point files, importing into project, 42 associating drawings with projects, 3 AutoCAD Land Desktop, 2 accessing commands, 18 documentation, 7 drawing environment, 17 exiting, 32 preference settings, 20 preferences, 6 projects, 3, 24 prototypes, 4 starting the program, 16 templates, 5 toolbars, 19
B
baseball fields, 152 basketball courts, 152 boundaries (surfaces), 69 breaklines, 237 3D polyline, 124 creating from grading object, 131 breaklines in surfaces, 65, 67 breaklines, listing, 101 brick walks, creating, 153
civil engineering tools, 120 accessing, 120 menus, 121 closure error, traverses, 234 COGO points, 34 creating, 36 exporting as LandXML data, 113 from CAD points, 36 importing as LandXML data, 115 point creation settings, 39 See also points commands, accessing, 18 civil engineering tools menus, 121 Terrain Model Explorer, 142 toolbars, 19 Compass Rule, 234 connection-point-out, roadway templates, 176 contours (surfaces), 68 creating, 75 creating from surfaces, 76 grading methods, 73 contours, grading object, 131 converting units with LandXML, 112 coordinate geometry. See COGO points coordinate zone transformations, importing points, 47 Crandall Rule, 234 creating profiles, 158 cross section templates, 175 cross sections creating, 172 database files, 171 editing, 183 exporting as LandXML data, 113 subassemblies, 179 cross sections alignment data folder, 156 cul-de-sacs creating, 151 curbs. See subassemblies Curve Calculator, 164, 166 custom objects and proxy graphics, 32
D
data collectors, 226, 235 description key codes, 226 Geodimeter, 226 Leica/WILD, 226 Survey Command Language, 226 Survey Link DC, 226 TDS, 226 Topcon FC4, 226 data file settings, 222 data files, settings, 22 data, editing and adjusting, 234 data, entering, 224
C
CAD point nodes, 36 CAD points, converting to COGO points, 36 calculators, hydrology, 145 See also hydrology calculators checking points, 50
Index
239
creating figures, 235 downloading data collectors, 226 field book files, 225 sideshot data, 232 Survey Command Line, 228 using menu commands, 227 data, exporting in LandXML, 113 database, points, 36 daylighting commands, 125 creating grading plans, 133 defining surface templates, 176 DEM files, 65, 70 in surfaces, 64 deployment, network, 2 description key codes, 226 description keys, 53 example, 54 exporting as LandXML data, 113 importing as LandXML data, 115 designing intersections, 150 pipe runs, 190 dialog bar, label style properties, 104 Digital Elevation Models. See DEM files displaying toolbars, 19 drawing setup, 5 drawing environment, setting up, 17 drawing settings, 6, 21, 220 points, 39 prototypes, 25 drawing template (roadway cross sections), 175 drawings associating with projects, 3 creating, 28 modifying settings, 21 opening, 31 setup, 30 sharing with other AutoCAD programs, 31 dynamic labels, 103
Existing Ground Section Editor, 172 exiting the programs, 32 exporting LandXML data, 113 alignments, 113 cross sections, 113 parcels, 113 points, 113 profiles, 113 surfaces, 113
F
field books, 225 creating files, 224 downloading, 226 figure commands continue, 236 inquiry, 236 list area, 236 mapcheck, 236 offset, 236 figure prefixes, 236 figures, 235 creating breaklines from, 237 filters points, 47 finished ground (profiles) alignment data folder, 156 editing, 164 finished ground data (surfaces), 73 flow rates Mannings n calculator, 144, 147 folders for prototypes, 28 football fields, 152 footprint, grading object, 126 frames, creating, 205, 210 label frames, 209
G
Geodetic Calculator, 57 calculating state plane coordinates, 58 geodetic transformation (points), 57 Geodimeter data collector, 226 grading, 124125 daylighting, 133 developing a grading plan, 124 finished ground surface, 124 object. See grading object grading object, 126 breaklines, 131 commands, 125 contours, 131 creating, 126128 editing, 129130 footprint, 126 slope tags, 126 surfaces, 131
E
editing label styles, 108 editing points, 48 editing surfaces, 74 edit history, 75 elevations in profiles, 157 entering data, 224 See also data, entering existing ground (profiles), 158 alignment data folder, 156 creating, 158 creating vertical alignment data, 157 editing, 164 sampling, 157
240
Index
grading plans, creating using daylighting commands, 133 Grading Wizard, 127 grips editing grading objects, 130
M
Mannings n gravity pipe calculator, 147 Map project workspace drawing environment, 17 menu commands, 227 menu display, 19 menus, workspace, 121 multi-user alignment database, 84
H
accessing, 8 how to use, 910 horizontal data files, storing, 156 hydrologic analysis in site development, 142 hydrologic studies, 140 hydrology introduction to hydrology tools, 140 routing, 148 See also pond routing using Hydrology commands, 140, 146 hydrology calculators, 143, 147 methods for calculation, 146 runoff from watershed areas, 145 Help
N
Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), 145 network installation on a, 2 normal surface template, 175
O
object data, listing, 100 Object Enabler, 31 objects and proxy graphics, 32 custom, 32 defining as road alignment, 86 labeling, 103104 proxy objects, 31 querying, 101 observation database, 224225, 234 online Help, accessing, 8
I
importing alignments, 115 LandXML data, 115 parcels, 115 points, 42, 115 profiles, 115 surfaces, 115 inquiry commands, 100101 installation overview, 2 intersections designing, 150
P
parcels, 92 calculating volumes, 79 exporting as LandXML data, 113 geometry, 93 importing as LandXML data, 115 managing, 96 parking stalls, creating, 152 patios, creating, 153 persistent properties in point groups, 51 pipe runs conceptual profile, 194 designing, 190 drawing and defining, 191 editing graphically, 196 finished plan, 198 finished profile, 200 Pipes Run Editor, 197 plan/profile sheet series, 203 creating, 211 generating, 204 laying out, 203 plotting. See Sheet Manager point codes creating polyline from, 188 point database, 36, 225
L
label styles in sheet series, 209 labeling parking stalls, 152 labels, 103104 editing, 108 label styles, 103 point labels, 35 style properties dialog bar, 104 LandXML schema, 112 LandXML, using, 112 exporting data, 113 importing data, 115 laying out sheet series, 205 Layout commands, 150 Least Squares, 235 Leica/WILD data collector, 226 listing object data, 100 long section. See roadway profile lookup tables, 164, 166
Index
241
matching drawing points, 49 multi-users, 38 setting up, 37 point groups, 50 exporting as LandXML data, 113 importing as LandXML data, 115 new features in Land Desktop, 51 persistent properties, 51 saving to prototype, 51 point labels, 35 point markers, 35 changing settings, 40 points COGO point objects, 36 creating, 41 creating point groups, 50 creation settings, 39 description keys, 53 editing, 48 geodetic transformation, 57 importing, 42 marker settings, 40 point database, 3637 point filters, 47 point labels, 35 point markers, 35 settings, 39 synchronizing, 49 text settings, 41 polygon figure, from traverse points, 237 polylines creating from road design, 187 pond routing, 148 ponds, 136137 detention basin outflow hydrograph, 148 routing, 148 preference settings, 20 data files, 22 drawings, 21 prototype, 22 preference settings for drawings, 220 profile, 158 changing settings. See also profile settings, 157 creating, 161 data files, 156 editing vertical alignments, 164 horizontal alignment data folder, 156 sampling existing ground data, 157 superimposing profiles, 162 profile settings, 157 profiles exporting as LandXML data, 113 importing as LandXML data, 115 project point databases, 36 matching points to, 50 setting up, 37
projects, 3, 24 associating drawings, 3 drawing setup, 30 file locks, 26 managing, 26 prototypes, 22 renaming, 26 prototype, saving settings to, 220 prototypes, 4 default folder, 28 introduction, 25 managing, 27 saving point groups to, 51 settings, 22 proxy graphics, 31
Q
querying drawing objects, 101
R
raster images listing, 101 raw descriptions point selection, 51 reporting data with LandXML, 112 reports, from queries, 101 Road Output commands, 187 roadway 3D grid, 188 creating cross sections, 172 editing, 164 editing in section view, 170 modifying slopes, 181 profile, 161, 164 roadway alignments, 84 defining objects, 86 editing, 88 offsetting, 89 stationing, 89 runoff, 145 calculating, 146 calculating from watershed areas, 145 hydrologic analysis, 142
S
sampling existing ground (profiles), 157 sampling settings cross sections, 172 schema, LandXML, 112 section sheet series, creating, 213 selecting points methods, 51 settings, 20 data files, 22, 222 drawings, 220
242
Index
file paths, 20 modifying in drawing, 21 point creation, 39 point marker, 40 point text, 41 points, 39 prototypes, 22, 25 saving to a prototype, 220 settings for profiles, changing, 157 setup profiles, 5 Sheet Manager, 202 cross section sheets, 202 definition of terms, 205 frames, 210 label styles, 209 plan and profile sheets, 202 profile sheets, 202 sheet series, 205 plan/profile, 203, 211 section, 213 sheet styles, 206 annotation, 209 frames, 209210 plan/profile, 206 types, 202 shoulders. See subassemblies, 179 Sideshot editor changing sideshot data, 232 site development hydrologic analysis, 142 slopes roadway, 181 soccer fields, 152 sports fields, creating, 152 starting AutoCAD Land Desktop, 16 static labels, 103 stopping sight distance (SSD), 150 storage volume detention basin (calculating), 148 storm water detention basins, 148 management, 148 styles, sheets. See sheet styles subareas in watersheds, 145 subassemblies, 179 templates, 175 subdivisions parcels, 92 subgrade surface template, 175 superimposing alignment profiles, 162163 support, technical, 2 surface (template), 175 surface breaklines, using figures for, 237 surface data creating from road design, 187 surface data, grading object, 131 surface models, 64
showing statistics, 101 using Terrain Model Explorer, 65 surfaces, 70 adding breaklines to, 131 breaklines, 67 calculating volumes, 79 creating contours, 76 data, 66, 73 editing, 74 exporting as LandXML data, 113 finished ground data, 73 importing as LandXML data, 115 surfaces, creating, 64 boundaries, 69 breaklines, 65 contours, 68 surface data, 66 Terrain Model Explorer, 65 triangulated irregular networks. See TIN using various data, 64 Survey Command Language, 226227 Survey Command Line accessing, 228 angle distance command, 228 syntax, 228 Survey Link DC, 226 Survey Prefix Library, 236 symbols associating with points, 53 using for description keys, 54
T
tag labels, 103 target regions, 126 TDS data collector, 226 technical support, 2 templates, 5 templates (cross sections), 175 defining, 176 reference points, 176 templates (normal surfaces), 175 templates (subgrade surfaces), 175 Terrain Model Explorer, 65, 142 edit history (surfaces), 75 text labels, sheet styles, 209 time of concentration, calculating, 144 TIN (triangular irregular networks), 64 toolbars, displaying in Land Desktop, 19 Topcon FC4 data collector, 226 transferring and archiving data with LandXML, 112 transformations, geodetic, 57 Transit Rule, 235 translating and rotating coordinates with LandXML, 112 transparent commands, 20
Index
243
traverse adjustment tools, 234 traverse loops, closing, 234 traverse points, displaying as polygon figure, 237 triangulation from breaklines, 237 turnarounds in cul-de-sacs, 151 tutorial, AutoCAD Land Desktop, 7, 11
U
updating points, 50 user preferences, 6
generating reports, 166 horizontal data files, 156 sampling existing ground data, 157 See also roadway profile vertical curves calculating length, 166 creating, 164 lookup table, 164 view definitions, sheets, 203 view frames, sheet styles, 209 volumes calculating cut and fill, 79 calculating methods, 79
V
Vertical Alignment Editor creating existing ground data, 157 design speed, 165166 generating reports, 166 lookup table, 164165 vertical curve calculator, 164, 166 vertical alignments existing ground profiles, 158
W
walks and patios, creating, 153 watershed hydrologic analysis, 142 watershed subareas calculating runoff, 145 Workspaces, 19
244
Index