I have a question on geometry edits in ORD 10.12.02.04 (2022R3).
I know that OpenRoads’ design intent and rules were intended to be timesavers. But I’ve reached a point where – after trying to make extremely simple edits to a horizontal geometry – they are proving anything but. I freely admit user error is most likely to blame. What I’m doing should take minutes. Yet I have not been able to accomplish the task in a couple hours. Are you up for a challenge? Try and make the edits I’m requesting in this file and please tell me how to accomplish it. I’ve viewed many videos on how to modify OpenRoads geometry to no avail.
The attached DGN has a single alignment, “RampTest”. It has all simple curves, no spirals. There are four curves; I’m simply trying to modify the radii of the southerly two… and that’s it! No moving PIs, nothing else. The southernmost curve with PI 13+15.92 - I’ll call it Curve 1 - has a radius of 9046.7020’, or 38 minutes. I want to modify it to be 9549.2966’, or 36 minutes. The next curve to the north with current PI 27+47.75 – let’s call it Curve 2 - has a radius of 6875.4935’, or 50 minutes. I want to modify it to be 7473.3625’, or 46 minutes. I want the ending station to be the same, so my start station will be 9+xx.xx.
I can readily modify the radius of Curve 2. Type in a new radius, it updates, great. But that’s all I can do.
Curve 1? That’s trickier since it’s an arc at the end of an alignment. Back when, I’d have added a PI off the geometry end, modified the radius, then deleted the additional tangent. There are PI-based commands in OpenRoads to create geometry, but not modify PIs (so far as I know). So, as holding the PI location means the curve will get flatter, I need to append the geometry off the south end so it can lengthen. And that I’ve done a number of times, with a “dumb” regular line and also a geometry line created in OpenRoads. I’ve tried to do so by snapping, and not snapping. Whatever the method to create the tangent, I then append the complex geometry with that line, then try to change the radius. When I do that, it doesn’t simply change the radius of Curve 1. It also changes the PI location… the PI moves. What’s really weird is that changing the radius of Curve 1 also moves the PI of not just Curve 1, but it also moves the PI of Curve *2* as well!
???
If I start by changing the radius of Curve 1 before doing anything else, it will still move *both* the PIs of Curves 1 and 2.
If there is a rule at play, I cannot figure it out, cannot disable it, and it’s driving me crazy.
On a hunch, I created new geometry myself in this file, another test alignment. I was able to modify curve radii and not a single PI moved.
As far as I know, this geometry originally came from an SS2 ALG a while back (I'm not 100% sure and don't have access to that ALG). I have no desire to re-create the geometry. We have sheet cuts and a profile based on it already (the changes are very minor, to where modifying two named boundaries manually is not a big deal) so re-creating it would present other issues.
I want to like this program. Please, help me eat crow... tell me how make these edits. What am I doing wrong?
Thanks for any and all information!
RampTest.dgn
A few notes to add here from what both Marks stated. In some cases, the Table Editor will simplify geometry and clean up rules. Once an alignment is designed, one way to quickly "rebuild" or correct a quirky alignment for easier manipulation is using the Import Horizontal Geometry from Ascii tool using the format below. (initial design report to help grab XY e.g. HorizontalElementsTable.xsl). This has worked to clean up PRC, PCC, etc. in rather complex designs that wouldn't open in the Table Editor or modify easily. I've had people combine so many random methods and various tools in building an alignment that the Table Editor didn't recognize!
Bentley Accredited Road Designer | Bentley Accredited Road Modeler
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Thanks to all those who responded! This one proved tricky… but all the shared insight was a big help. Thanks to everyone for the information; I really appreciate it.
Using that information, I determined because the alignment end was on a curve, it could not have been defined as a fillet like the other curves. Even if I was able to extend the complex alignment on the correct tangent, the curve was still defined differently and thus difficult to edit.
What I wound up doing was deleting the curve and then redefining it. This was my solution process to modify the ending curve of the alignment:
It’s a bit of a workaround, but it works. Thanks again for all the help and tips!
Answer Verified By: jcallicott
Thanks so much for the update and the carefully worded process of what you did to fix your issue. Much appreciated!
Best Regards,
Mark