Hi Chris
I understand your point and it is true that these are two diff software's and no point in anybody claiming one is better than other.. it depends upon what the end product you are designing.
If I have to sum up Solid works/ Inventor/ Pro E / Solid edge etc are more for Industrial / Mech design and Revit is more for built environment ..
and in some areas there is a grey area where both could be used
having said that there ae many like me who use Solidworks because our product is at the end of the day is a manufactured product but happens to be used in built environment. so although the product is not like a consumer product of medical device it is an Architectural product it is same as if CAD modelling for factory manufacturing
So from a OEM perspective I also have a similar issue with Revit
My native CAD is SOlidworks and there is no chance company will use Revit because some times within our product we do stuff which is more like industrial design which SW and like can do far better than Revit
BUT now a days in Built environment OEM like us are expected to give out BIM friendly models ... and that is where the conflict comes
A) Even if I dumb down the parametric SW model before converting to a BIM friendly Revit the conversion is not that easy ! ( may be Inventor and Revit being owned by Autodesk the pathway from Inventor to Revit is easier! don't know!)
B) TO get BIM models alternative is to start from scratch ... and that is where management is thinking hang on .. we have already spent time and money on getting a pure 3D model so why can't we somehow convert it?
- Doing from scratch has many issues
1) Re interpretation of design
2) Possibility of errors
3) Even if Revit creation is outsourced the time that will required by internal staff to educate the external contractor !
And at the end of the day management says why not spend that money in creating new product models in SW ( INV/ Pro E etc)
Because we still need the accurate models in our native parametric CAD