Revit Graphic distorsion: did Autodesk Solved this problem?

Revit Graphic distorsion: did Autodesk Solved this problem?

sugule100
Explorer Explorer
478 Views
5 Replies
Message 1 of 6

Revit Graphic distorsion: did Autodesk Solved this problem?

sugule100
Explorer
Explorer

So far We know that if the project is modelled somewere far from the project base point the geometry would be distorted and this is what i'm experiencing right now, it looks as sketchy line are enabled while acturally this option is disabled (as seen bellow). the only sulution was to move the project back to somewhere near the project base point. my question is: did Autodesk Solved this problem?Capture1.JPG

0 Likes
479 Views
5 Replies
Replies (5)
Message 2 of 6

RobDraw
Mentor
Mentor

I think you answered your own question.


Rob

Drafting is a breeze and Revit doesn't always work the way you think it should.
0 Likes
Message 3 of 6

sugule100
Explorer
Explorer

My question is: did Autodesk Solved this issue without moving the project to somewhere elese, becouse in some cases, for all the obviouse reasons you cann't just move the project.

 

0 Likes
Message 4 of 6

Avaris.
Advisor
Advisor
Message 5 of 6

Anonymous
Not applicable

You must model as close to possible to the Project Base Point.

 

Assuming you did not model something close to the project base point AND something very far away, you can try to move the project base point close to your far away element. Always model so that elements are close to the project base point, this is an inherent limitation of a single point precision system and will likely remain for many years to come.

 

If moving the project base point does not work, you can embed the project int oa new Revit project and place it near the project base point.

 

Also, CADs are often the source of the problem. Check to see if any of your CADs have a ridiculous range. You can kind of identify the culprits by going into a 3D view and doing ZOOM ALL (ZA shortcut), then seeing what lies at the limits.

Message 6 of 6

dgorsman
Consultant
Consultant

Double precision, not single... but otherwise, agreed.  It's a computer science/math problem, one that requires a lot of gymnastics to solve.

----------------------------------
If you are going to fly by the seat of your pants, expect friction burns.
"I don't know" is the beginning of knowledge, not the end.