Hey Jeff! Great to see you covering the electrical discipline in your project! And as an electrical engineer, I'm proud of you for using the Wiring, not just detail lines! Even though you are not actually logically circuiting your devices, like you demonstrate, they at least are "connected" and move along with the devices - very handy - and for anyone that has tried to "edit" detail arcs - good luck. And I can see how combining all electrical (power and lighting and even data if you had it) is advantageous to architects - that's how I've seen most others do it as well - the overlay is a great tip - and looks like Brenton's families do contain the hidden geometry needed to get the "cut plane" issue to work for you that way. On our actual electrical plans, we do separate them into power plans and lighting plans (and even technology plans), mainly just because we show so much more detail with the circuiting and all - so the view range is not as much as an issue. And yes, like @JeffHurdis noted in a comment, have to be in the "Electrical" discipline for the wire breaks to show. Again, thanks for covering this trade in your video! (and thanks to Larry for the shout out!)
changing the wires/connections to red wold also be another way to not overweight the line thickness while still using standards to help with the visual and information design.
Good day boss, I watched one of your tutorials which you took us through conceptual design of a farm house having two sections. From the conceptual design you used railings family to create an arrow, can you pls make a tutorial to show the process?
Hi mate thanks for the video - have watched your videos for years! How did you get pyrevit to work with ‘25? Our company has stuck with ‘24 thinking that it hadn’t yet been patched/rebuilt. Would be grateful for the route to victory! Thanks 🙏
where is the link for the sections and details that you mention at 4:18? thanks
th-cam.com/users/liveWgNNKUr-jRQ?si=RYVgrkYRP-U41FgT
@@TheRevitKid Thank you
Hey Jeff! Great to see you covering the electrical discipline in your project! And as an electrical engineer, I'm proud of you for using the Wiring, not just detail lines! Even though you are not actually logically circuiting your devices, like you demonstrate, they at least are "connected" and move along with the devices - very handy - and for anyone that has tried to "edit" detail arcs - good luck. And I can see how combining all electrical (power and lighting and even data if you had it) is advantageous to architects - that's how I've seen most others do it as well - the overlay is a great tip - and looks like Brenton's families do contain the hidden geometry needed to get the "cut plane" issue to work for you that way. On our actual electrical plans, we do separate them into power plans and lighting plans (and even technology plans), mainly just because we show so much more detail with the circuiting and all - so the view range is not as much as an issue. And yes, like @JeffHurdis noted in a comment, have to be in the "Electrical" discipline for the wire breaks to show. Again, thanks for covering this trade in your video! (and thanks to Larry for the shout out!)
interesting and valuable insights, thank you for sharing
@@EddieJohansson-pe9ny cheers!
changing the wires/connections to red wold also be another way to not overweight the line thickness while still using standards to help with the visual and information design.
Good day boss, I watched one of your tutorials which you took us through conceptual design of a farm house having two sections. From the conceptual design you used railings family to create an arrow, can you pls make a tutorial to show the process?
Thank you…
Hi mate thanks for the video - have watched your videos for years! How did you get pyrevit to work with ‘25? Our company has stuck with ‘24 thinking that it hadn’t yet been patched/rebuilt. Would be grateful for the route to victory! Thanks 🙏
is Pyrevit now usable for Revit 2025?
@@alfredocarretas5640 yes, I am using it in this video!
You have to change the drawing discipline to "Electrical" for wire breaks to show, at least that is the only way I have had success with it
Too much unnecessary talk😢