Does anyone know how to put in a vertical pipe bend between nodes in your drainage model?
Beau,
Strictly speaking you can create a profile in the profile view for your conduit to be anything that you would like. I would see this as a regular occurrence on non-gravity systems, but it can be done on gravity flow systems as well. The caveat here would be that the analytical effort looks to a conduit start and stop elevation and resulting slope, so would not account for any bends developed in this manner. If you are needing to perform hydraulic calculations, not just looking to model your system (for plan production efforts for example) you will need to place a dummy or null node at that location and adjust the conduits on either side to reflect your desired configuration.
Hope that helps.
Steve
www.envisioncad.com
ORD - 10.12.02.04 / 10.10.21.04 / 10.10.01.03 / 10.08.01.33Power GEOPAK / Power InRoads - 08.11.09.918Civil 3D - 2021 / 2022
Here is some information on Transitions, which may be an option for you.
https://communities.bentley.com/products/hydraulics___hydrology/w/hydraulics_and_hydrology__wiki/12703/cross-section-vs-transition-for-modeling-slope-or-size-change
Karl Dauber, PEAdvance ConsultingLaurens County, SCkarldauber@advconsult.netwww.advconsult.netwww.linkedin.com/in/karldauber
As Karl and Steven both say, the way to model a vertical bend in a storm or sanitary pipe is to insert a node, and a transition node is what I would use for this. Storm and sanitary conduits are always considered to be at a single gradient between nodes.