CAD Masters is a leading engineering and design firm, recognized by Autodesk as a trusted partner in the industry. As an Autodesk Gold Partner, Autodesk Authorized Training Center, a Civil 3D Implementation Certified Expert, and a member of the Autodesk Developer Network, we have been recognized by Autodesk for our expertise and commitment to our clients.
We offer a broad range of software solutions, technical support, professional engineering services, training, and hardware solutions to cater to the diverse needs of our clients. We are also proud to have received Autodesk’s top award for Customer Loyalty, a testament to our dedication to providing exceptional services and solutions that exceed our clients’ expectations.
Hey can you please upload the next part of this video, for problem no 2 to 4 it might help us to know what kind of problems we get in creating alignment. Please as it's posted before 10 months.
It's a bit unusual imo for a high performance WS to put the power supply to the top. Specs would be nice. At least, i think there is an RTX A4000. For CAD, an i5 with high clock speed is sufficient, most CAD software don't use more than 2 cores. 32GB RAM should be also enough. I've got almost the same, except the CPU, mine is an i7. My colleague has an i5 with higher clock speed, the buildup and handling of large assemblies is a bit faster at his WS.
CPU: Intel Core i9-14900k 24 Cores up to 6 GHz LGA 1700 Motherboard: Asus PRIME Z790-P LGA 1700 (Intel 12th/13th Gen) WIFI 6, Bluetooth Memory (RAM): 64GB DDR5-5600Mhz Memory (up to 128GB) Video Card: NVIDIA RTX A4000 16GB Graphic Card (Certified AutoDesk Drivers) Hard Drive: 2TB Samsung 990 EVO NVMe M.2 SSD Hard Drive 2: 1TB Samsung 990 EVO NVMe M.2 SSD Case: Fractal Design Torrent ATX Compact Mid-Tower Power Supply: Thermaltake Toughpower 1000W 80 PLUS Gold Power Supply OS: Windows 11 Professional 64-bit Parts & Labor Warranty: 1 Year Parts and Labor Warranty
cadmasters.com/product/premium-plus-cad-workstation/ CPU: Intel Core i9-14900k 24 Cores up to 6 GHz LGA 1700 Motherboard: Asus PRIME Z790-P LGA 1700 (Intel 12th/13th Gen) WIFI 6, Bluetooth Memory (RAM): 64GB DDR5-5600Mhz Memory (up to 128GB) Video Card: NVIDIA RTX A4000 16GB Graphic Card (Certified AutoDesk Drivers) Hard Drive: 2TB Samsung 990 EVO NVMe M.2 SSD Hard Drive 2: 1TB Samsung 990 EVO NVMe M.2 SSD Case: Fractal Design Torrent ATX Compact Mid-Tower Power Supply: Thermaltake Toughpower 1000W 80 PLUS Gold Power Supply OS: Windows 11 Professional 64-bit Parts & Labor Warranty: 1 Year Parts and Labor Warranty
As of yet, no we do not. More videos are in the works, however. In the meantime we do offer self-paced Revit training materials (cadmasters.com/books/revit-architecture/) as well as comprehensive live online Revit courses (cadmasters.com/training-courses/revit-architecture-online/)
2000 years later, I finally noticed the "Building Site" in the Toolspace Settings 🤣 Are people using this, or are there better methods now? I always had the Revit team export out the building footprint, which I'd XREF attach to the design linework file
First thing, you get into one of the reasons I despise Revit : "See these lines. They are planes." I get what they are doing, but that doesn't make it less hair pulling. Wait. You had a ref. plane visible on the ground in Level 1 plan. And the cad file came in vertical in the back view? How does this make sense? 20:51 - Is that an artefact of the revolve, or is you cad still showing? [changed size] LOL, two seconds later you answer the question. Your cad is showing. Best delete that. Pretty solid. I think I am much better prepared now to try some fancy family work.
Ma'am, if say you export some reports....then make changes in that excel file and save it...any numerical value as for reference, can you bring that back in project explorer and that would affect the new drawing? or it can just do exporting rather than importing updated/edited info?