In this exercise, you will view how a corridor assembly is applied at various stations along a baseline alignment.
The view/edit corridor section tools are useful for inspecting how the corridor assemblies interact with other objects in the corridor model.
View a corridor in section
The drawing contains an assembly, profile view, and corridor model. Each object is displayed in a separate viewport. The viewport that contains the assembly is active.
A cross-section of the corridor at the starting station is displayed. The elevations and offsets are displayed on the grid axes. The cross section view contains the assembly, as well as the other adjacent objects.
At the current station, the offset alignments are represented by vertical green lines, and the existing ground surface is represented by the horizontal red line. The vertical red line in the center of the grid represents the assembly baseline. Profile intersections with the baseline are indicated by markers.
Notice that as each station is displayed on the grid, its location in the plan and profile viewports is identified by a perpendicular line.
Experiment with the zoom modes
Notice that the view zooms back out to the grid extents. There are three zoom modes in the view/edit corridor section tools. These modes control the behavior of the grid when you navigate to another station:
The view zooms in to the Daylight (Right) subassembly at station 3+00.00. Notice the shape, elevation, and offset of the subassembly.
The view zooms in to the Daylight (Right) subassembly at station 9+00.00. Notice that the shape, elevation, and offset of the subassembly is quite different from station 3+00.00. The subassembly remains at the center of the grid and at the same zoom factor as you navigate to other stations.
Notice that the offset and elevation values that are displayed on the grid axes do not change. The shape of the Daylight (Right) subassembly changes to reflect how it ties in to the existing ground surface.
The view zooms back out to the extents of the assembly.
To continue this tutorial, go to Exercise 2: Editing Corridor Subassemblies.