uagrad89
2015-09-24, 01:46 PM
As a user of all of the main Autodesk software packages (AutoCAD, Inventor, Revit, and 3ds Max) to some degree, I have always found Revit to be the quirkiest and the most difficult to deal with and many times have found it impossible to make it do what I want it to do. Case in point: I have a two story model that I have been working on for a while now and I cannot get the roof created like I need it to be. The attachment I have included with this post has a screen capture of the roof boundary that I sketched and then the roof that resulted from this sketch. I do not understand why Revit built the jutted-out portion of the roof the way it did. It seems to make much more sense that the peak of the roof would remain the same and that the ending point of the roof on both sides would adjust according to the width of the jutted-out portion. I originally did this as two separate roofs and while it worked much better I could never get the roofs to join into a single roof so I tried to do it this way.
I have also had trouble getting my interior walls on the second floor to end at the roof and not stick up through the roof on one side or the other. I do not have a capture of this because I finally got so frustrated that I deleted my roof and started over.
I am admittedly not a power user of Revit by any means. I teach at a university and use it sparingly (my background is actually in mechanical engineering) but I am always trying to increase my knowledge of software packages for when I have to teach small sections of it in one of the classes that we offer. I would really like to get better at Revit and am working on doing so but it is somewhat slow going. I have had another person who knows a lot more about it than me look at this issue and he doesn't understand why it did what it did either. Any help/advice would be appreciated.
Thank you.
I have also had trouble getting my interior walls on the second floor to end at the roof and not stick up through the roof on one side or the other. I do not have a capture of this because I finally got so frustrated that I deleted my roof and started over.
I am admittedly not a power user of Revit by any means. I teach at a university and use it sparingly (my background is actually in mechanical engineering) but I am always trying to increase my knowledge of software packages for when I have to teach small sections of it in one of the classes that we offer. I would really like to get better at Revit and am working on doing so but it is somewhat slow going. I have had another person who knows a lot more about it than me look at this issue and he doesn't understand why it did what it did either. Any help/advice would be appreciated.
Thank you.