The main reason journal files don't always run is that the model has changed
on disk since the beginning of the session. For example, suppose you have
the files: a.rvt (implicitly version 8), a.0006.rvt, and a.0007.rvt. You
start a revit session and retrieve a.rvt. You make some changes and then
save. Now you have a.rvt (implicitly version 9), a.0008.rvt and a.0007.rvt.
You do some more in your session and then it crashes.
If you try running the journal, it will start by retrieving a.rvt, which is
impliclty version 9, when it expects to get version 8.
If you saved during the session that crashed then you will probably run into
this problem. The solution is either:
1) Rename a.rvt to something else, say a.new (don't delete it in case
something goes wrong). Rename a.0008.rvt (or whichever version was current
at the time the session started) to a.rvt. Then run the journal file.
2) Or, try to edit the journal file to remove everything between the time
you originally retrieved the file and the last time you saved it.
"Christopher Zoog" wrote in message
news:41b5face$1_1@newsprd01...
> lol, no it's not a simple question and answer isn't all that obvious....
> to
> use a journal file you drag it on top of the revit icon on you
> desktop...then sit back and watch the fun 😉 Most of the time it will
> take you right up to where the error occurred, then let you go on from
> there. It doesn't always work though.
>
> -Z
> "Jenb" wrote in message
> news:9302350.1102443529350.JavaMail.jive@jiveforum1.autodesk.com...
>> Thanx for responding,this seems to be the answer. Can you just open the
> latest journal file or do you somehow have to recover the data?
>> The last time this happened, I looked at the journal files, but it seemed
> as if there was also data missing. I apologize if the question seems
> simple,
> but I am blond!
>
>