A section is a cut through the 3d-model.
An elevation is different. It shows the face of something, or perhaps more correct, the projection of an object/s to a plane.
So I looked forward to use PLACE ELEVATION CALLOUT > INTERIOR ELEVATION. Cool tool.
But my testing suggests it produces SECTIONS, not elevations.
It does exclude a wc chair - but not other geometry at the location of the callout that don't reach to the wall at the direction of the callout.
I can still place a separate elevation-callout very close to the wall. But that nukes the beauty of placing all four elevation of a room in one go.
Just me ?
I think I know the tricks - but no tricks can help if you if the room is wider at one end.
And your example is revealing - you should see the wall behind, not the doors.
regards / Thomas Voghera
Thomas,
Do you mean you would want to see it like this?
-Travis
I could also turn on the back view to show the context of the toilet compartments that are behind the step.
I would think think the answer is:
It is a section in both cases.
One actually cuts through something and one does not because you cut through space in FRONT of all the objects.
Ustn since 1988SS4 - i7-3.45Ghz-16 Gb-250/1Tb/1Tb-Win8.1-64bEric D. MilbergerArchitect + Master Planner + BIMSenior Master Planner NASA - Marshall Space Flight CenterThe Milberger Architectural Group, llc
Any elevation, external or 'room', same for roof plan, must be a section - otherwise results unpredictable if the system's trying to decide for you, what to exclude. User can and should be the judge and executor of that.