CAD Forum - tips, tricks, discussion and utilities for AutoCAD, Inventor, Revit and other Autodesk products [www.cadforum.cz] ARKANCE | CONTACT - CZ | SK | EN | DE
Over 1.096.000 registered users (EN+CZ). AutoCAD tips, Inventor tips, Revit tips. Try the new precise Engineering calculator and the updated Barcode generator. New AutoCAD 2026 commands and variables.
RSS channel - CAD tips RSS tips
RSS discussions

Discussion Discussion forum

?
CAD discussions, advices, exchange of experience

CAD Forum - Homepage CAD discussion forum - ask any CAD-related questions here, share your CAD knowledge on AutoCAD, Inventor, Revit and other Autodesk software with your peers from all over the world. To start a new topic, choose an appropriate forum.

Please abide by the rules of this forum.
This is a peer-to-peer forum. The forum doesn't replace the official direct technical support provided by ARKANCE for its customers.
How to post questions: register or login, go to the specific forum and click the NEW TOPIC button.
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Events   Register Register  Login Login

Topic ClosedAutocad Vs Revit

 Post Reply Post Reply
Author
gnowxed View Drop Down
Newbie
Newbie


Joined: 05.May.2008
Status: Offline
Points: 5
Direct Link To This Post Topic: Autocad Vs Revit
    Posted: 06.May.2008 at 00:41
Hi all,
 
 
I know all lot of you have hear about revit-  faster and better, while some still prefer Autocad.
so i was thinking to start a Topic  to dicsuss all about it.
 
 
Back to Top
Vladimir Michl View Drop Down
Moderator Group
Moderator Group

Arkance Systems CZ

Joined: 26.Jul.2007
Location: Czech Republic
Using: Autodesk software
Status: Offline
Points: 2121
Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06.May.2008 at 07:56
... which is better - a humvee or a bulldozer?
 
You can hardly compare a general purpose CAD application (AutoCAD) and a BIM architectural software (Revit).
 
You could compare these two applications in AEC usage only - in AutoCAD (or rather AutoCAD Architecture - ADT) you can draw anything but it takes time and your learn curve is rather steep. In Revit, all you draw has to "make sense", drawing/modeling is easier and all schedules and tables are automatic (associative).
Vladimir Michl (moderator)
ARKANCE - https://arkance.world - Autodesk Platinum Partner
Back to Top
Capone View Drop Down
Groupie
Groupie


Joined: 05.May.2008
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 33
Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06.May.2008 at 15:38
Well said Vladimir.

There are a few main reasons that I still prefer ACA or ADT over Revit:

1. I have a decade of details and drawings that I can still reference in AutoCAD and not have to completely start over. And along those lines I have created AEC objects that reflect the actual products that we use.

2. I have countless .vba and .lisp routines that save me a lot of time. Revit (at least when I initially looked into it) was not as versatile and harder to customize.

3. Compatibility. Most firms still use AutoCAD in some form or another. It's a pain when you can't effectively share information back and forth. I think Revit will get there eventually, but IMHO it's ot there yet for me.
Back to Top
Vladimir Michl View Drop Down
Moderator Group
Moderator Group

Arkance Systems CZ

Joined: 26.Jul.2007
Location: Czech Republic
Using: Autodesk software
Status: Offline
Points: 2121
Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06.May.2008 at 16:09
Yes, some AEC users still prefer AutoCAD-based tools for similar reasons.
 
ad 1) you can still read/reference existing DWG details in Revit quite easily
 
ad 2) right, utilities are harder to make in Revit (you do not need them so often in Revit but still...)
 
ad 3) yes, for bi-directional communication it could be more pain; for exporting of plain DWG files (clean file, subset of layers), Revit could be paradoxically easier to use than AutoCAD Architecture
 
Vladimir Michl (moderator)
ARKANCE - https://arkance.world - Autodesk Platinum Partner
Back to Top
Capone View Drop Down
Groupie
Groupie


Joined: 05.May.2008
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 33
Direct Link To This Post Posted: 06.May.2008 at 17:18
More than just referencing existing drawings tho. I have literally hundreds of wall, door, window, cabinetry, structural members, etc... AEC objects and multi-view blocks that are created to the exact specs and textures of the actual product along with all of the property set data and BOM information for costing and schedules. I would really like to be able to bring that with me when I jump ship. Ermm 
Back to Top
gnowxed View Drop Down
Newbie
Newbie


Joined: 05.May.2008
Status: Offline
Points: 5
Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07.May.2008 at 02:42

 

there is pros and con in both software. It will be good if they can combine both good capability together.

It will be like drawing using heaven drafting software.

 

Back to Top

Related CAD tips:


 Post Reply Post Reply
  Share Topic   

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down



This page was generated in 0,074 seconds.