![]() ![]() Ill list them in my perceived order of importance.ġ. Thanks for the reply cracked me up.ĭWGs in Revit pose a number of problems, some that are significant because they impact performance and stability, and some because they impact the quality of your deliverables. What I'd like to understand is why they are absolutes.what are the consequences? ![]() (Interesting that none are mentioned in the worthless a$$ books I bought before finding this forum) GordonYep, I've read of these "absolutes" here. Do not install, do not use, do not promote, do not trust anyone willing to use or promote. Like as a 3D intermediary between Inventor & Revit as another example. Simple truth is that Freeze Drawings is simply a very bad kludge foisted off on users by Autodesk, who couldn't come up with a good answer to a very real problem, so they came up with a bad, fast answer that also leverages DWG, which they still think is viable for all sorts of stuff it isn't viable for. And I am pretty sure it explodes it too, but not certain, in the same way I don't know what turd tastes like, cause I don't eat it. Guess what the Freeze Drawing tool, from Autodesk, does? Yep, it inserts a DWG. If you must have a DWG in a project at all, it is always a link, never an insert, and god forbid, never, EVER an exploded insert. ![]() You don't do it, because only pain can come of it. "NEVER insert a DWG into a Revit project" is one of those rules. I am sure Aaron will jump in and add, but the gist of it is that there are a very few absolutes in using Revit. ![]()
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