Complex Stacked Walls in Revit Tutorial
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- Опубліковано 14 лип 2024
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Learn about Stacked walls in Revit. I show you how to do this on a classic wall structure.
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Incredibly informative! And a lot easier to follow than other tutorials I’ve found, thank you very much!
That was a great video for more realistic walls!!. Thanks so much!!
Thank you .... Great video regarding stacked walls
What a nice tutorial
The king of Revit master on UA-cam, yes you are.
but here are some small tips for our king,
Could you add highlights for each important step that will be on the video? so people could jump to that section directly because everyone comes from a different level of skills and this method could save lots of time instead of watching the whole video.
Maybe collect questions and set up a live streaming line once a while with fans that we could do the Revit together? Or select one of the fan's Revit files and review his/her work? so people could ask you questions when they couldn't solve the Revit alone. because real-time communication will help everyone build up the unique Revit community.
no his not
I understand your focus is on how to draw/model things in Revit. One small tip that will improve your expertise would be to understand structure a little better, and design with structure in mind. For example, the corner of this building would likely need structural support (the window mullion won't do it). If you design with structure in mind, you won't have to redo when you get to a structural engineer. And since so many people watch you, your habits (good or bad) get multiplied.. and you're quite young with a potentially long future, so I recommend you make the investment in learning structure.
yeah - i think, he is kinda just here to walk us through the software- n , the engineering onus is on you. i think he is doing great, and has helped me alot over 5 years
@@jonathanday8 exactly, I dont think a majority of his builds are structurally sound, but they show unique and cool techniques
This is not a structural engineering class. This video was simply to show you how to do a complex stacked wall in Revit. Just as the title of the video suggest. This is a software tutorial. Nothing more nothing less.
I have learn something new thank you so much
Unlearn it, because we don’t use these in the real world. This is a computer program thing.
This is so great and educative. Live from Uganda.
Dear Balkan A. Even non-architects will appreciate this one. Thanks a lot.
Definitely. I'm a Civil Engineer but I actually use Revit a lot
Nice tutorial, but you should mention at the beginning to never use this option!
All the future Revit users, first rule, all the wall layers we creat separately! It makes later work much easier, especially with schedules :)
Does break function will help?
I work with Structural Load Bearing walls at my job. Is there a way to customize the steel studs to different gauges? Same with the Headers over the Window/Door Openings. I would need to customize the headers as Back-to-Back Light Gauge CFS or Wide Flange Beam or HSS. Thank you for the informative video.
Hi! What should I do if it doesn’t align the walls ?
The profile I created and loaded into the model does not appear among the wall sweep profile options, not even when I load it. Why?
Sir, how if your tutorial in other language?
The best, i love your turorial. Kisses from Brazil
Which revit ver is this??
Stacked walls have been in Revit since Rel. version. Revit still has them in every release, but nobody uses these in the real world.
make a video on wooden roof
Hi, I am a beginner in MEP revit with no knowledge of revit. Do you have any video I can refer to?
Hey homie. Nobody ever uses these. They have been in Revit for years, and nobody uses them. Mainly because you cannot schedule them. In the West we don’t use them, because in the real world you would never have a wall specified with 2 pieces. It’s always wall type “A”. Stacked walls are great for really fast modeling, but when you get to CD’s you will never have 2 walls as 1 designator. I’ve only seen 2 people use this in my career. In Denver 2007, and in Canada last month.
I see. thanks for the information. Great tutorial though.
Thanks for information sir. It's great tool n we need know the downside too,but what if we use to break it after modelling?