When exporting Revit Families to other formats, why are the curves in Sweeps, Blends, etc. tessellated instead of just a simple Sweep? On my small objects this creates awful results.
I've attached screens shots of a simple Revit sweep, it's conversion to DWG and then the preferred conversion as shown in Sketchup.
I've even tried the route of exporting SAT files from Revit and then using MESHSMOOTH in AutoCAD, with better but this unexpected results. This type of conversion seems to be prevalent across several Autodesk products, but to me it doesn't make sense and produces poor results.
Any advice or workarounds would be appreciated.
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by alan.quinn. Go to Solution.
Can you attach an actual Revit family and let me know what format you are exporting too? Thanks for posting.
Here's the Family I was testing and a DWG conversion that shows the meshes.
I just understand the need for tesselation on a Revolve or Sweep. I'm assuming this is coming from some conversion Library Autodesk has licensed because I see this conversion type coming from several products (Max, Maya, AutoCAD, et al). I get a very similar result by outputing to SAT and doing the conversion to DWG using Max or AutoCAD (Max is somewhat better).
A more uniform conversion requests a line seqment length and then uses that for the granularity of the curves and thin that profile is simply lofted or lathed.
This is a known issue that development is working on. I'm not sure when the changes will be made of released. In my test file changing the Modify DWG/DXF Export Setup from Polymesh to ACIS solids under Solids seems to give different/better IMO results. I have attached your case to the internal case and hopefully this will be addressed in near future.
Thanks again,
Yes, by using a SAT file export, it creates very nice solids. However, my application requires meshes.
Thanks for your support...