Remove consumed models from the Project Model in Design Collaboration

Remove consumed models from the Project Model in Design Collaboration

PerS-Arkitema
Explorer Explorer
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Message 1 of 5

Remove consumed models from the Project Model in Design Collaboration

PerS-Arkitema
Explorer
Explorer

Hi,

Can't figure out how to remove a consumed model from the project model. 

The rvt-file is deleted from the "shared" folder, but will still appears in the project model under the team where it's been consumed.

 

When I'm standing under E1-ENVAC, there's only one model. (screen dump underneath)

PerSArkitema_2-1634540640480.png

 

When I'm standing in "A-Arkitekt", where the model has been consumed, two models appears (the old and the new one) (screen dump underneath)

PerSArkitema_3-1634540967221.png

 

How can I remove/delete the old model (PCG_E1_Affaldsugmodel.rvt) from the viewer/project model?

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4 Replies
Replies (4)
Message 2 of 5

martyn_messerli
Autodesk
Autodesk

@PerS-Arkitema Thanks for the question, so far there is no way to remove a model from the time line. "Deleting" a model in Document Management will just hide the model but not delete it.

 

- Martyn




Martyn Messerli
Software Engineer
Message 3 of 5

JK-CAMERON
Advocate
Advocate

Any changes or updates to this?  No way to reverse a consume?

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Message 4 of 5

Chad-Smith
Advisor
Advisor

There really needs to be an option to Archive models/packages for both Shared and Consumed. Below is my Idea for this from earlier this year.

Design Collaboration // Can't archive models

Message 5 of 5

JK-CAMERON
Advocate
Advocate

A new customer we just recently onboarded to the process accidentally consumed a model that was pushed to the cloud during their internal testing phases.  They were unaware of the nil delete policies at the time.  Regardless of the model being deleted it still was on the timeline as a square.  2 teams accidentally consumed and the test model was actually someone who had typed with mode txt, hello there.  So now in the aggregated view of a large facility there is a huge “hello there”. If there wasn’t an element of humor involved I think this would have dissuaded them to use bim360 again. 

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