Don't worry Dimitris.. your pictures don't seem 'strange' at all and -yes-
surely you can make them in Revit and -yes- once you get the hang of it
you'll be faster then doing it in Solid modelling for sure.
pic 1 - you could make this through a wallbased family [either window or
generic, this does not really matter, only when placing the object windows
will come from the window button and generic families will come from the
component button.. also in the sheets they will show up slightly
different] - just make an opening, make a frame in the wall [sweep], make a
frame [partial sweep] on the surface of the wall [for this set your
workingplane to the surface], add the underpart as an extrusion - done -
place it.. maybe make it parametric in size and re-use it in the project..
pic 2 - so easy.. not even worth mentioning
pic 5 - somewhat similar to pic 1 - use extrusions locked on equal distances
instead...
pic 6 - if you can draw the profile in 2D [surely very easy] you can add
this as a roofbases sweep.
pic 7 - make this as a wall, edit profile - draw the 'staired' profile -
accept ... then just add the fence on top, put it on the lowest level, it
won't matter that the iron will stick in the wall, you wouldn't be able to
see that.
for any more questions please refer to AUGI - you will receive lots of good
feedback from Revit-pro's all over the world.
greetinx Vincent
"JTB" schreef in bericht news:412c3913_1@newsprd01...
> I think Revit is really great but since I 've been working with AutoCAD
for
> 15 years (Release 2.6) I need some help to start thinking the REVIT WAY...
>
> I very often make the plans and the 3d Photorealistic model for some
> engineers who don't know CAD because they are old or because they dont
have
> the time to learn a program... So they give me some very strange things
to
> design.
> In AutoCAD we have 3D Solids and whith them I can make strange balusters,
> strange door frames etc. The problem is of course that 3D Solids are not
> always easy to edit and change.
> Working with families is quite difficult for me now but I think it gets
> better every day.
> Since in revit we work with construction elements rather than lines and
> curves I think I have to get used to the idea that everything must have a
> name. For example, how we create a pergola? What do we use for simple and
> always different decorative stuff? What kind of element we use? I can do
it
> even with a wall of 0.20m height but it doesn't seem right.
> I send you some small images in a ZIP file to see what I mean with
strange
> stuff... The question is :
> CAN I DO IT WITH REVIT ?
>
> T.I.A. for your time ...
>
> Dimitris
>
> BTW I already use Accurender with Autocad so rendering is no problem...
>
>
>