Hey we have some exciting news! We are partnering up with MEP Guy to launch the most effective REVIT courses for MEP designers and engineers! Check out the Electrical course preview and sign up here: www.mepguy.com/electrical As a special bonus, we're offering a free download of an Electrical Clearance family that anyone can use to designate a "no fly" zone or clearance zone that must be maintained in front of electrical equipment. Drop it anywhere you need folks to keep clear of zappy things!
I feel like this was the perfect introduction video for Revit. My company is making me learn this program after having mastered AutoCAD I am ready to take on a new challenge. Thanks for this content. Please continue to make more. I am an electrical designer and I find your content very helpful resource for learning.
Thank you so much! Revit is way more fun than AutoCAD in my opinion 😁 You're pretty much my exact target audience as I spend a ton of time helping designers learn Revit and/or electrical design if they are interested. Get on the discord channel, you can ask questions and include screenshots if you need help on something.
Excellent. Been watching tons of Revit videos lately on YT. IMO You have the most potential to really educate on most relevant concepts. Also, unfortunately, I notice that the electrical part of Revit is quite sparse relative to the other disciplines. Hopefully you can fill this void with your quality content.
Thank you! The department is also so sparse that the time needed to make these videos have been hard to come by 😬 hopefully this grind slows down a little soon.
That's something I've been looking for, like I know how to do Revit but I didn't know about most of the concepts explained in this tutorial. i did enjoy and learned a lot. I hope there will be more to learn from you. Keep educating Sir! GOODLUCK!
You did. It was a great video but is still way more complicated than it should be. (autodesks fault) Thanks. Keep up the good work. Us Revit electrical guys need more videos like yours.
Question: I understand that work-sharing allows the project to move alot faster compare to working alone, but isn't there also a saying the more people the messier it can get? For example since we are not updating the work we have done every second back to the main server file, and by the time we do sync maybe our conduit intercross some ones pipping system. Is there any tips/tracks in working separately, but at the same time not facing the problem I mention above?
Oh certainly, my team of 3 can handle a 1.2 million sq ft 7 building campus design while I see another team of 11 struggle with one building. It boils down to knowing how to direct your team so they don’t run into each other. I would designate sides of the corridor so fire protection and electrical conduits don’t just run down the middle at the same time. We would talk to mech and work out if we should run over or under their ductwork prior to doing the work. We do weekly clash detections which helps too and I usually don’t put more than 2 people per model. Plus all the syncing bogs the whole thing down.
Hey we have some exciting news! We are partnering up with MEP Guy to launch the most effective REVIT courses for MEP designers and engineers! Check out the Electrical course preview and sign up here: www.mepguy.com/electrical
As a special bonus, we're offering a free download of an Electrical Clearance family that anyone can use to designate a "no fly" zone or clearance zone that must be maintained in front of electrical equipment. Drop it anywhere you need folks to keep clear of zappy things!
I feel like this was the perfect introduction video for Revit. My company is making me learn this program after having mastered AutoCAD I am ready to take on a new challenge. Thanks for this content. Please continue to make more. I am an electrical designer and I find your content very helpful resource for learning.
Thank you so much! Revit is way more fun than AutoCAD in my opinion 😁 You're pretty much my exact target audience as I spend a ton of time helping designers learn Revit and/or electrical design if they are interested. Get on the discord channel, you can ask questions and include screenshots if you need help on something.
Thank you! I’m starting my revit training next week, and I can’t wait.
Good timing eh? 😁 i have a very busy work week next week but I shall try to get Part 2 out! Linking cad drawings, Revit models and keynotes.
It's been a few years since I've used reddit, and this is a great refresher! Thanks for the videos! Very informative, and easy to understand.
Thank you and welcome back! 🤓
Really appreciate this! You make easier to understand than most videos out there! Thank you!
That’s great to hear! Thank you for watching!
Excellent. Been watching tons of Revit videos lately on YT. IMO You have the most potential to really educate on most relevant concepts. Also, unfortunately, I notice that the electrical part of Revit is quite sparse relative to the other disciplines. Hopefully you can fill this void with your quality content.
Thank you! The department is also so sparse that the time needed to make these videos have been hard to come by 😬 hopefully this grind slows down a little soon.
That's something I've been looking for, like I know how to do Revit but I didn't know about most of the concepts explained in this tutorial. i did enjoy and learned a lot. I hope there will be more to learn from you. Keep educating Sir! GOODLUCK!
Thank you so much! I’ll continue to post as time and projects permit 😊
love ur content keep going
thank you so much
This is great! Easy to understand and I'm glad that I stumbled upon your videos!
1000xTnank you!
Awesome video dude....keep them coming.....
AWESOME! Thank You.
Great work .. thanks!
How about one on how you handle legends. 2023 didn't seem to fix this. Been hoping they would for 8 years.
I think I did make a legend video! But specifically, what did you have problems with?
You did. It was a great video but is still way more complicated than it should be. (autodesks fault) Thanks. Keep up the good work. Us Revit electrical guys need more videos like yours.
Can you BIM electric motors expanded views etc?
???
Question: I understand that work-sharing allows the project to move alot faster compare to working alone, but isn't there also a saying the more people the messier it can get? For example since we are not updating the work we have done every second back to the main server file, and by the time we do sync maybe our conduit intercross some ones pipping system. Is there any tips/tracks in working separately, but at the same time not facing the problem I mention above?
Oh certainly, my team of 3 can handle a 1.2 million sq ft 7 building campus design while I see another team of 11 struggle with one building. It boils down to knowing how to direct your team so they don’t run into each other. I would designate sides of the corridor so fire protection and electrical conduits don’t just run down the middle at the same time. We would talk to mech and work out if we should run over or under their ductwork prior to doing the work. We do weekly clash detections which helps too and I usually don’t put more than 2 people per model. Plus all the syncing bogs the whole thing down.
Are you an electrical engineer?
Yes, but technically no. :)