Cool as always. Unfortunately in reality adoptive families are only used by professionals.. I have never seen regular Revit user to speak about it. They all struggling with the basic ones.... When you're making vertical ref. lines have you tried to select two points and hit spline. It's alternative...
It’s for advance revit user only. Pls it from beginner level,, mean step by step from strat to finish if possible. It’s very nice but as a beginner can’t catch all
I think a slightly more flexible method would be making railings from generic components that can be built up like puzzle pieces, such as corners, ends, returns, stairs, etc. Or better yet, Revit fixes the railing tool so thousands of Revit users don't spend millions of hours wasting their time trying to make railings without using the broken railing tool.
Very good content !! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks Darrell. I appreciate you taking the time to comment. 👍
Hi! I'm new to Revit and still learning. Is that Rhino? do I have to use rhino to make adaptive families?
Thanks
Hi, welcome, no Rhino was used in this video. This is 100% Revit. All the best with your learning.
Cool as always. Unfortunately in reality adoptive families are only used by professionals.. I have never seen regular Revit user to speak about it. They all struggling with the basic ones.... When you're making vertical ref. lines have you tried to select two points and hit spline. It's alternative...
Thanks Damir! Yes, you are right - the average user won't go near them. Hopefully this video can change that 😀. As always - thanks for your support 👍.
It’s for advance revit user only. Pls it from beginner level,, mean step by step from strat to finish if possible. It’s very nice but as a beginner can’t catch all
Adaptive families are not for beginners. If you need a stair, start with the native stair tool within Revit.
I think a slightly more flexible method would be making railings from generic components that can be built up like puzzle pieces, such as corners, ends, returns, stairs, etc.
Or better yet, Revit fixes the railing tool so thousands of Revit users don't spend millions of hours wasting their time trying to make railings without using the broken railing tool.
Interesting point. Sometimes we need to find a work around. Thanks for the comment!