Great work Bin He. I would like to request you to try the same railing family on a continous stair with 2 flights and 1 landing at the centre, Also the railing should have a handrail. i tried but the railing and handrail is not joining to be continuous throughout.
Thank you Bin He, really enjoyed your Revit exercises. For the second fitting, I think you can use curtain wall technique. Much easier, just sharing. th-cam.com/video/8WCRqNki3fk/w-d-xo.html
I agree with you. Curtain wall is easier than panel railing for schematic design. But sometimes, when the railing becomes a bit more complicated, we might not be able to do it using curtain wall. It can be very helpful to understand all the settings of the rail family, because you will have more choice to model them in different situations.
@@BINHE615 How so? Curtain wall railings are only terrible at making sloped panel railings. You typically know the railing is sloped or not at early stage of DD anyways. If they are sloped, you won't even think about using curtain wall railings; if they are not, then you know using curtain wall railings will work 99% of the time throughout the rest of the project. The only good thing about the default railing system is its consistency. If you know your railing has to be adjusted a lot then the malleability of curtain wall railing is always the better choice - if you don't have to put them on a lot of slopes that is.
Great work Bin He.
I would like to request you to try the same railing family on a continous stair with 2 flights and 1 landing at the centre, Also the railing should have a handrail. i tried but the railing and handrail is not joining to be continuous throughout.
Thank you so much!!!✌👍👊
Halo bin, i just create a railing exactly like in your video but my glass panel wont start at first tread
It's a bit hard to guess where the problem is. Have a play with the setting in Baluster Placement.
thanks a ton for this!
Excellent! Thank you
weird that I follow your steps but I cant seem to delete rail 1, it just wont let me, if tried, it will delete th whole railing after I click okay lol
It might because some top and base constraint of the balustrade. Check and make them Host instead.
Thankyou Bin ~
💚
how can we estimate this railing?
Do you mean schedule the number of parts? I'm not sure TBH.
mashallah
Thank you Bin He, really enjoyed your Revit exercises. For the second fitting, I think you can use curtain wall technique. Much easier, just sharing. th-cam.com/video/8WCRqNki3fk/w-d-xo.html
I agree with you. Curtain wall is easier than panel railing for schematic design. But sometimes, when the railing becomes a bit more complicated, we might not be able to do it using curtain wall. It can be very helpful to understand all the settings of the rail family, because you will have more choice to model them in different situations.
@@BINHE615 How so? Curtain wall railings are only terrible at making sloped panel railings. You typically know the railing is sloped or not at early stage of DD anyways. If they are sloped, you won't even think about using curtain wall railings; if they are not, then you know using curtain wall railings will work 99% of the time throughout the rest of the project.
The only good thing about the default railing system is its consistency. If you know your railing has to be adjusted a lot then the malleability of curtain wall railing is always the better choice - if you don't have to put them on a lot of slopes that is.