

Please note that those families are not meant to be manipulated in any way once placed in a project - for this I have the parametric sub-set of our library, which will all be built in Revit from the ground up. The object styles and the parameter are not for use - I did that one family (DAB10) on the fly, to post here, and forgot to purge it the way I do my families. There are a few object styles I would get rid off though (well, all of the ones in the image).Īnd I see you have a Yes/No parameter in there for the legs and as you have probably figured out, that is not going to work as they are part of the cabinet and you can not show/hide part of that exploded dwg.Thanks. This would be a 2 rating, but it's free, and it's worth reading if you can tune out a lot to enjoy a good story.To be honest, it is not as bad as I thought it was going to be with the exploded dwg, never really exploded a 3D dwg in Revit, but at least it becomes a 3D object you can sort of manipulate. I downloaded epub & mobi, and both opened with an odd mix of single- and double-spacing that couldn't remedied in iBooks, SonyReader or Kindle.įormatting, punctuation errors and basic structural muddiness subtract stars from a recommendation. There are also distracting format issues. I stopped noting spelling and punctuation errors within the first chapter, the paragraph structure was often odd, with dialogue sometimes buried and sometimes not, and there were tons of awkward "saidisms." Things like, and really jarred me out of the reading flow. The characters are memorable and vividly described, they have full lives and real problems, and the action and battle descriptions are compelling.

The atmosphere of honor and bureaucracy was beautifully evoked from the first page. It jumps right into a space opera plot plot based on an almost-British Empire-type navy Space Marine elements. Let me start with the good stuff: I enjoyed this book.

