JosefTaylor
Structural
- Jan 13, 2015
- 3
Hi,
I'm getting an error 2034 "Plate may be very poorly shaped", which the help tells me is probably because my quad is not planar.
The plates represent corner supported glass panes which we are only using for load distribution (making use of the plate corner releases), so they're a single element per pane of glass.
The funny thing is that the error only comes up when I run a case with projected area loads. Surface normal loading works fine, and so does self weight. The geometry is complex, brought in from Rhino/grasshopper with some python scripts. The quads there are flat within the 1e-5 meter tolerance in Rhino (versus the 2.5e-4m tolerance in RISA). We've upped the joint coordinate precision in that process to the 14 decimal places allowed in the text file, but it still pops up the error. I'd rather not triangulate them, as that mucks up the load distribution. I've tried super stiff and super soft material properties to see if that helps, but it does not.
Any thoughts?
Thanks,
Josef
I'm getting an error 2034 "Plate may be very poorly shaped", which the help tells me is probably because my quad is not planar.
The plates represent corner supported glass panes which we are only using for load distribution (making use of the plate corner releases), so they're a single element per pane of glass.
The funny thing is that the error only comes up when I run a case with projected area loads. Surface normal loading works fine, and so does self weight. The geometry is complex, brought in from Rhino/grasshopper with some python scripts. The quads there are flat within the 1e-5 meter tolerance in Rhino (versus the 2.5e-4m tolerance in RISA). We've upped the joint coordinate precision in that process to the 14 decimal places allowed in the text file, but it still pops up the error. I'd rather not triangulate them, as that mucks up the load distribution. I've tried super stiff and super soft material properties to see if that helps, but it does not.
Any thoughts?
Thanks,
Josef