Revit for Breakfast
2008-09-03, 01:22 AM
Revit seems to do everything...except making panels. At our firm we need to make panels where they would be visually pleasing as well as parametric so we can collect data. We looked at curtain walls, and that was a no-go, we looked at trying to embed the 1/16" gap between the panels (Biggest pain in the A$$ ever). Though pain in the but, it wasn't far off. We found out about the dis-join command (which can be found by clicking the wall, then right-clicking either of the blue dots. The disjoin command appears.).
This now lets you create wall panels (but you have to do this on every new panel). No more dragging of adjacent wall when moved.
But with every breakthrough, there comes a challenge:
Our parametric data includes length, width, area, and volume. But its funny there's no option for height (which is vital for us). We found a work around, and that was adding a calculation inside the schedule properties for our recently added field - height:
Formula: (Area /1') / Length
Badda boom, badda bing. Hey it works! But if I look closely some heights are different. (they should all be the same as no roof has been drawn and all walls go up to level 2).
What happens is, that Revit subtracts our window and door areas to make its calculations, thus leaving us with inaccurate numbers.
Can anyone shed some light on getting the height going in my schedule?
This now lets you create wall panels (but you have to do this on every new panel). No more dragging of adjacent wall when moved.
But with every breakthrough, there comes a challenge:
Our parametric data includes length, width, area, and volume. But its funny there's no option for height (which is vital for us). We found a work around, and that was adding a calculation inside the schedule properties for our recently added field - height:
Formula: (Area /1') / Length
Badda boom, badda bing. Hey it works! But if I look closely some heights are different. (they should all be the same as no roof has been drawn and all walls go up to level 2).
What happens is, that Revit subtracts our window and door areas to make its calculations, thus leaving us with inaccurate numbers.
Can anyone shed some light on getting the height going in my schedule?