I have been tasked with making a couple complex rolling doors that each occur only once in a project and are quite different from one another. I decided the quickest way to make these would be to model them in Rhino and bring them into a Revit family as a .sat file.
1. I started by creating a wall-based Generic Model (GM) family and bringing in the Revit. I connected the door to the wall and created a void form to cut the wall. The family worked great, and when viewed in plan was cutting properly. The doors have large boxes over the header and I was able to use symbolic lines to represent the box in plan. However, these doors weren't showing up in my existing door schedule.
2. So, I changed the family category to 'Door' and reloaded it into the model. It appeared in the schedule just fine, but it no longer cut in plan. The box above the header appeared with the same lineweight as the door panel.
3. I next tried creating a new Door family and bringing in the CAD (as .sat) directly into the door family. When I loaded this into my model it had the same issue as attempt 2.
I imagine the best way to do this is to build everything in Revit from the get-go. But is there a way to get both the cutting of the GM family and the scheduling of the Door family? Revit can obviously do both, just seemingly not at the same time...really, it just wants you to do things it's way.
I've attached two screenshots, one showing the door in section (to explain the 'box' above the header), and one showing two attempts in plan side-by-side, to demonstrate the issue visually. I have also attached .rfa families of my three attempts, numbered the same as my three attempts above.
Any guidance or admonishments anyone can offer for my shoddy family-building are welcome.
Thanks,
S
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by barthbradley. Go to Solution.
Solved by ToanDN. Go to Solution.
Solved by barthbradley. Go to Solution.
Your void doesn't cut all the way through the Wall in the Project. You need to align and lock the Void in the Family to the Host Wall's Interior and Exterior Ref. Planes.
Why don't you use Symbolic Lines in Family Plan and Elevation/Sections - similar to the way most other Door/Window Families are done?
Nest a Shared Generic Model Family into a Door Family, and load/place the Door Family in the Project . That do it for you?
You can bring the CAD or SAT file to a generic model family, make it Shared, and nest that generic family to a door family.
great, thanks all--
just to hijack this thread a bit with a different question--@barthbradley, I had included symbolic lines previously to show the box above, but I keep having the issues of the lines overrunning where I want them to stop. I have the door set back a locked distance from the face of the wall, but the symbolic lines always add back this offset, even if I connect them to another symbolic line spanning the opening and lock this line to the face of wall reference plane. Is there a way to lock the end of a symbolic line to a reference plane? Screenshots attached.
If you TAB-Select on the end of a line, you can cycle to the end point which will be represented by a tiny blue dot. Is that what you are asking about?
...align and lock that end point to a Ref. Plane.
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