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04-02-2010, 11:58 AM #1Humble Chief User/Abuser
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How To Determine Height and Depth of Foundation Wall?
I've been at this for a long time and thought I could figure it out but I'm stumped.
I would like to draw a footing without a stem wall or at least find a method to change the height of the stem wall but it seems to draw the same height and depth no matter the settings.
I've changed the defaults a thousand times, I've tried mono slabs, short stem walls tall stem walls but there's a default somewhere I'm missing that keeps drawing the footing wall the same depth and height.
Here's what I get.
The purpose of Government is to control the common resources, not the common man.
Larry Hawes
Hawes Home Design
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04-02-2010, 12:25 PM #2
Larry
There are slab tools. Or place a post and the footing should generate.
Delete the post and use the footing.
Might be a better way, I have not done much with just footings...........
Allen Colburn Jr.
Pascoag RI 02859
Residential Design Drafting/Framer
Drafter for:
http://www.artformhomeplans.com/
Chief Architect X4
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04-02-2010, 12:29 PM #3Humble Chief User/Abuser
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Thanks Allen and I'm pretty comfortable with slabs but was just wondering and stumped by this 'setting' I could not seem to change.
The purpose of Government is to control the common resources, not the common man.
Larry Hawes
Hawes Home Design
Vista, CA
Hawes Home Design
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04-02-2010, 12:42 PM #4
In the wall BDX you can change the height of the stemwalls.....but make sure you raise the "floor" or crawl space so that it doesn't block the move.
Having said that though....it will still force a 4" stem wall. So if the goal is footings w/o stem walls...use slabs.Joey R. Martin,aibd,cgp,cga,caps
Martin Design & Planning
Elwood, Indiana
Cell. 765-860-3567
eMail. joeymdp@gmail.com
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04-02-2010, 01:01 PM #5habitual user
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I just use a custom wall, typically 16" or 18" concrete, linetype to match footings, and placed on the footings layer. If this is an under slab footing or a crawl space strip footing, then raise or lower it in a backclip to the correct top and bottom heights. If it's a perimeter grade beam, it will already be at the correct top height, with the added advantage is that it is possible to place piers under it.
Warren Hirsch
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04-02-2010, 01:12 PM #6Humble Chief User/Abuser
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Thanks very much for the replies. I keep thinking there's a way to deal with custom mono slabs and realize - AGAIN - there's just (weak) work arounds.
Joey I've got a slab foundation so no dbx to change heights. Warren that works pretty well but so sad that it's necessary. The problem is mine though; I had slipped into a universe where Chief dealt with slabs like a mature (version 13?) building software program.
Back to reality - I'll use your suggestions - thank you.The purpose of Government is to control the common resources, not the common man.
Larry Hawes
Hawes Home Design
Vista, CA
Hawes Home Design
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04-02-2010, 01:24 PM #7
OK...mono slab....set the height of the footing to set the "height" or depth of the stem wall.
Is this what you need?Joey R. Martin,aibd,cgp,cga,caps
Martin Design & Planning
Elwood, Indiana
Cell. 765-860-3567
eMail. joeymdp@gmail.com
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04-02-2010, 01:36 PM #8Humble Chief User/Abuser
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So sorry Joey, I was really vague in my first post. I'm trying to figure out a way to add a simple footing to an existing mono slab, for a simple remodel room addition. I've worked around it for so long and just had an idea that I could possibly use a foundation wall to draw a footing in. I don't think that's the answer though. I think the slab or wall definition is the best way?
The purpose of Government is to control the common resources, not the common man.
Larry Hawes
Hawes Home Design
Vista, CA
Hawes Home Design
X5 and X6 Public Beta 3
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit
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04-02-2010, 03:02 PM #9Registered User Promoted
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If you are connecting to an existing monolithic slab, then you must be creating a new slab floor system, yes?
Why not use the slab tool to show it where it goes in plan view. Add the dash line depicting the width of the footing below. You know how deep below grade the thickened edge it must be and make the slab thickness that dimension. It will look correct on the elevations. Use the rectangular polyline box tool to make the section view accurately and you can fill it with the concrete fill pattern. Easy to add the rigid insulation using the box tool again if you need that requirement.
That is how I have been doing it and it looks fine on the construction document page where it counts.Gene Marteeny
Chief Architect rookie using X2
using ZT S1015i notebook with HDMI out
22" HDMI monitor,
1 tb external hard drive
antique HP750c+ plotter driven by an even older
xp machine dedicated solely to the plotter.
Drawing board still set up equipped with Mayline, lamp with magnifier lens and latest electric eraser just in case....
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04-02-2010, 04:19 PM #10Humble Chief User/Abuser
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That sounds pretty good Geno.
You have to make sure you build your foundation for the main house BEFORE you add the slab, correct? Or else you'll get a continuous slab around the existing as well as the new addition?
And are you saying you place (for instance) a 12" deep slab under the room addition, add dashed lines to show the interior footing perimeter, then modify it in a section view to show the footing as being deeper than the slab?The purpose of Government is to control the common resources, not the common man.
Larry Hawes
Hawes Home Design
Vista, CA
Hawes Home Design
X5 and X6 Public Beta 3
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit
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04-02-2010, 05:01 PM #11Registered User Promoted
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For the foundation plan view that will be sent to the layout, show the dashed lines indicating the width of the footing below. I'm assuming this is also a mono-pour like the existing house foundation. I wouldn't mess with the slab. Just make the depth look right for the addition elevations. The section is a separate cad drawing showing the mono-pour foundation as it should look.
I'm just getting the stuff on the con docs to look like they should, not worrying about the model.
I think is is faster to draw a cad detail for the section instead of messing around with the inaccurate section from the Chief generated slab foundation.
For me, it's all about the construction documents
This may be blasphemy here on the Chief site... not caring about the model.Gene Marteeny
Chief Architect rookie using X2
using ZT S1015i notebook with HDMI out
22" HDMI monitor,
1 tb external hard drive
antique HP750c+ plotter driven by an even older
xp machine dedicated solely to the plotter.
Drawing board still set up equipped with Mayline, lamp with magnifier lens and latest electric eraser just in case....
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04-02-2010, 05:14 PM #12
Larry,
If you name your new addition a Garage and then build the foundation with a mono slab, you will get a separate slab for the addition.Glenn
Chief X5
www.glennwoodward.com.au
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04-02-2010, 05:29 PM #13Humble Chief User/Abuser
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I always go back there too Geno but I'm giving it **** (and wasting an amazing amounts of time) trying to get the model right. I usually give up, view to CAD and get on with things. But if the model can be created quickly and accurately then everything can go really smoothly from there.
The purpose of Government is to control the common resources, not the common man.
Larry Hawes
Hawes Home Design
Vista, CA
Hawes Home Design
X5 and X6 Public Beta 3
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit
Motherboard EVGA Classified SR-2
Processors (2) 6 core Xeon L5640
Memory 24GB PNY DDR3 1600
Video EVGA GTX 780
Monitor 26" LG 1920 x 1200
21" Viewsonic
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04-02-2010, 05:31 PM #14Humble Chief User/Abuser
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Yeah but ti never looks correct in plan view, or at least I can never get it to look right.
Here's what I get - Post #2 in thread below.
http://www.chieftalk.com/showthread.php?t=48625The purpose of Government is to control the common resources, not the common man.
Larry Hawes
Hawes Home Design
Vista, CA
Hawes Home Design
X5 and X6 Public Beta 3
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit
Motherboard EVGA Classified SR-2
Processors (2) 6 core Xeon L5640
Memory 24GB PNY DDR3 1600
Video EVGA GTX 780
Monitor 26" LG 1920 x 1200
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04-08-2010, 01:47 PM #15Registered User Promoted
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