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Sprinklers in RCP

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Message 1 of 13
-Navisworker-
6533 Views, 12 Replies

Sprinklers in RCP

-Navisworker-
Advocate
Advocate

How come it is so difficult to place a sprinkler in a Reflected ceiling plan. Ceiling Plan view makes the most sense but revit is resistant to it like an unhappy child. What am I missing? 

 

In what view am I to be placing sprinkler heads?

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Sprinklers in RCP

How come it is so difficult to place a sprinkler in a Reflected ceiling plan. Ceiling Plan view makes the most sense but revit is resistant to it like an unhappy child. What am I missing? 

 

In what view am I to be placing sprinkler heads?

12 REPLIES 12
Message 2 of 13

m.voss.alvine
Advocate
Advocate

what are your exact issues?  what type of family are you inserting?  Is it a linked rcp?

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remember to 'accept as solution' if this helped
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what are your exact issues?  what type of family are you inserting?  Is it a linked rcp?

Revit MEP 2015 Certified Professional
Revit Architecture 2015 Certified Professional
AutoCAD 2015 Certified Professional


remember to 'accept as solution' if this helped
Message 3 of 13

-Navisworker-
Advocate
Advocate

It is a linked RCP. All models are linked. This is strictly a Fire Protection model. I'm inserting default families, we are using it for construction coordination so I need to capture where issues will appear. 

 

I want to place pendants in the plan view and have them connect to the main pipes as necessary.

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It is a linked RCP. All models are linked. This is strictly a Fire Protection model. I'm inserting default families, we are using it for construction coordination so I need to capture where issues will appear. 

 

I want to place pendants in the plan view and have them connect to the main pipes as necessary.

Message 4 of 13
Anonymous
in reply to: -Navisworker-

Anonymous
Not applicable

Without a more detailed description of the problem it's virtually impossible to help.  Are you getting an error message of any kind?  Are your families face based?  What's your view range?  Are you just mapping sprinkler head locations or creating a fully piped system in the model?

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Without a more detailed description of the problem it's virtually impossible to help.  Are you getting an error message of any kind?  Are your families face based?  What's your view range?  Are you just mapping sprinkler head locations or creating a fully piped system in the model?

Message 5 of 13
apjones
in reply to: -Navisworker-

apjones
Collaborator
Collaborator

If the RCP is linked, you will need a sprinkler head family that is face based.  If it is ceiling based, you will have to create a duplicate ceiling in your file.  I am not sure if the out of the box heads are ceiling based or face based.

Pete

>Please Accept as Solution and give Kudos as appropriate to further enhance these forums. Thank you!

If the RCP is linked, you will need a sprinkler head family that is face based.  If it is ceiling based, you will have to create a duplicate ceiling in your file.  I am not sure if the out of the box heads are ceiling based or face based.

Pete

>Please Accept as Solution and give Kudos as appropriate to further enhance these forums. Thank you!
Message 6 of 13

robert.klempau
Advisor
Advisor

Hello @-Navisworker-,

 

did you select the Place on Face option when placing the sprinkler heads?

Place on face.png

 

 

If my post answers your question, please click the "Accept as Solution" button. This helps everyone find answers more quickly!

Kind regards,
Robert Klempau
Senior Consultant AEC
Cadac Group AEC BV

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Hello @-Navisworker-,

 

did you select the Place on Face option when placing the sprinkler heads?

Place on face.png

 

 

If my post answers your question, please click the "Accept as Solution" button. This helps everyone find answers more quickly!

Kind regards,
Robert Klempau
Senior Consultant AEC
Cadac Group AEC BV

Message 7 of 13

-Navisworker-
Advocate
Advocate

I roughed in the pipe and wanted to drop the sprinkler heads directly onto them in a RCP. I've since found some workarounds. 

 

I find myself copying a sprinkler head over and over as it is on the right plane. Then I have a section which I move around then trim things up. Its working well.

 

Seem that since a pipe is round / it may not have a "face" to attach to. Thanks to all that tried to help.

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I roughed in the pipe and wanted to drop the sprinkler heads directly onto them in a RCP. I've since found some workarounds. 

 

I find myself copying a sprinkler head over and over as it is on the right plane. Then I have a section which I move around then trim things up. Its working well.

 

Seem that since a pipe is round / it may not have a "face" to attach to. Thanks to all that tried to help.

Message 8 of 13
Anonymous
in reply to: -Navisworker-

Anonymous
Not applicable

Oh.  Yeah, you can't host a face-based element to a pipe.  What you have to do is host the sprinkler heads to either a ceiling or workplane (if the space has exposed structure), then model the pipe connecting the head to the main pipe run (if it's a pendant).  If it's in the same plane as the pipe, it should probably be a pipe fitting and simply slot right into the pipe.

Oh.  Yeah, you can't host a face-based element to a pipe.  What you have to do is host the sprinkler heads to either a ceiling or workplane (if the space has exposed structure), then model the pipe connecting the head to the main pipe run (if it's a pendant).  If it's in the same plane as the pipe, it should probably be a pipe fitting and simply slot right into the pipe.

Message 9 of 13

robert.klempau
Advisor
Advisor
Accepted solution

Hello @-Navisworker-,

 

Why create a group from one sprinkler head whit fittings and pipe and move the basepoint to the intersection of a tile and copy the group over your ceiling tiles.

Then ungroup them and connect them to the mail pipe.

If my post answers your question, please click the "Accept as Solution" button. This helps everyone find answers more quickly!

Kind regards,
Robert Klempau
Senior Consultant AEC
Cadac Group AEC BV

Hello @-Navisworker-,

 

Why create a group from one sprinkler head whit fittings and pipe and move the basepoint to the intersection of a tile and copy the group over your ceiling tiles.

Then ungroup them and connect them to the mail pipe.

If my post answers your question, please click the "Accept as Solution" button. This helps everyone find answers more quickly!

Kind regards,
Robert Klempau
Senior Consultant AEC
Cadac Group AEC BV

Message 10 of 13

-Navisworker-
Advocate
Advocate

This has really simplified the process. I would say this approach is 65% faster than the methods I had to do to achieve the same results.

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This has really simplified the process. I would say this approach is 65% faster than the methods I had to do to achieve the same results.

Message 11 of 13

jwinklerSB4SV
Advocate
Advocate
Accepted solution

Navisworker is right.  I am using the out of box family "Sprinkler-Pendent-Hosted  -1/2" Pendant on Drop."  It appears to be a faced based family because I can place it on a vertical face.  My revit model has both linked ceilings and I have created a compound ceiling for testing purposes.  From a Reflected ceiling view, the sprinkler will only host to vertical faces, even when "place on horizontal face" is checked.  I was able to rehost the sprinkler to the bottom surface of the ceiling using a 3D view.  What is the appropriate method of placing sprinklers if not using an RCP?  They do not want to attach to a compound ceiling?

Navisworker is right.  I am using the out of box family "Sprinkler-Pendent-Hosted  -1/2" Pendant on Drop."  It appears to be a faced based family because I can place it on a vertical face.  My revit model has both linked ceilings and I have created a compound ceiling for testing purposes.  From a Reflected ceiling view, the sprinkler will only host to vertical faces, even when "place on horizontal face" is checked.  I was able to rehost the sprinkler to the bottom surface of the ceiling using a 3D view.  What is the appropriate method of placing sprinklers if not using an RCP?  They do not want to attach to a compound ceiling?

Message 12 of 13
fabiosato
in reply to: jwinklerSB4SV

fabiosato
Mentor
Mentor
Accepted solution

Hello,

 

Another option is to create a reference plane in one elevation or sectio, draw it from right to left, so the sprinkler orientation will be correct, name it sprinklers. Make it at lower height, later you can move it up.

In the plan view, set workplane to this new reference plane.

When inserting the sprinklers select place on workplane.

Fábio Sato
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Hello,

 

Another option is to create a reference plane in one elevation or sectio, draw it from right to left, so the sprinkler orientation will be correct, name it sprinklers. Make it at lower height, later you can move it up.

In the plan view, set workplane to this new reference plane.

When inserting the sprinklers select place on workplane.

Fábio Sato
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Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.

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Message 13 of 13
jwinklerSB4SV
in reply to: fabiosato

jwinklerSB4SV
Advocate
Advocate
Accepted solution

Thank you, this is a good workaround.  Nevertheless this does not help me in my battle to prove that Revit is better than AutoCAD.  Our Fire Protection designer is learning to use Revit, and he couldn't even place a sprinkler according to the Revit instruction manual, and I couldn't explain why...

Thank you, this is a good workaround.  Nevertheless this does not help me in my battle to prove that Revit is better than AutoCAD.  Our Fire Protection designer is learning to use Revit, and he couldn't even place a sprinkler according to the Revit instruction manual, and I couldn't explain why...

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