Revit Timeline

Before Public release – Charles River Software 0.1 1999 11 (Early Adopter 1) 0.2 2000 01 (Early Adopter 2) Product released to Public – Revit Technology Corporation 1.0 2000 04 2.0 2000 08 2.1 2000 10 3.0 2001 02 3.1 2001 06 4.0 2001 11 4.1 2002 01 Autodesk Revit 2002 04 04 (Autodesk buys Revit Technology Corp) 4.5 2002 05 09 5.0 2002 12 17 2003 04 28 (Zoogdesign Revit Forum goes Live) 5.1 2003 05 5.5 2003 04 01 (pseudo mac release screenshot, April Fool's joke...Author unknown) 6.0 2003 12 22 6.1 2004 03 11 2004 05 26 (Zoogdesign Read Only to Merge with AUGI) 7.0 2004 12 13 Autodesk Revit Building (New Name) 8.0 2005 02 26ish 8.1 2005 08 12 (web release then withdrawn) 8.1 2005 08 23 (Actual release) 9.0 2006 04 12 (Shipping & Web Release) Autodesk Revit Series (Marketing Bundle w/ AutoCAD) 1.0 2003 12 01 (Revit 6.1) 2.0 2004 XX XX (Revit 6.1) 8.0 2005 XX XX (Revit 8.0) 8.1 2005 XX XX (Revit 8.1, AutoCAD 2006) Autodesk AutoCAD Revit Series 9 – Building (Marketing Bundle w/ Aut

AutoCAD Do's and Dont's

autocad dos and donts
Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash



AutoCAD Don’t
  • Never explode a dimension. When you think it’s necessary to explode one, don’t.
  • Never explode a hatch.
  • Do not place the Titleblock or border in Model Space.
  • Do not scale the Titleblock or border, larger or smaller, than 1:1
  • Do not scale or rotate reference files. The only exception to this is when you are dealing with a consultant who uses a different scale of units or a different origin. For example, Architectural units and Civil units are different by a factor of 12.
  • Do not “plot to fit” when plotting a drawing. Force the drawing to an accurate scale. Plot 1:1 or 2:1. Contractors and clients will most likely take scale measurements off your drawing. If the scale is off even a small amount it could be very costly, or dangerous.
  • Do not draw on layer “0”. (LAYER 0 is default layer when you open a blank drawing)
  • If you do, move it to the appropriate layer after it’s complete.
  • Do not draw on the “defpoints” layer. This layer is for AutoCAD to use for dimension information.(as for indicative purposes only)
  • Do not use cracked copies of AutoCAD Products. More info about cracked copies software products

AutoCAD Do’s
  • Always check over a drawing before you plot it. And assign it to proper plotystyles.
  • Always save a drawing before you print. Most often a drawing crashes right around the time you finish it and go to plot it out.
  • Whenever possible, use a reference when you have the same information that is shown in more than one drawing.
  • Limit the number of reference files you create. Don't use a reference file when a layer will do!
  • Zoom Extents before closing a drawing.
  • Set "SAVETIME" to 10 minutes, 15 minutes max.
  • Change the default temporary save location to something like C:\TEMP or you could even
    create a C:\AutoSave folder so you can find the files easier. The default location is buried in your windows user configuration folders.
  • When drawing dimensions, avoid dog legs (more than three lines in a leader), crossovers, and draw the leaders at a consistent angle whenever possible.
  • Make sure the leader actually touches the object it is calling out. Use your object snaps.
  • Lock your Model space viewports and assign to appropriate layer.
  • Practice purging the drawing whenever possible (especially bloated file). 
  • Populated with .bak files, Create a folder in your local C-drive, then in command "movebak" and copy your local folder to the command prompt and press enter. 
  • Practice using CAD standard in your drawings to enforce consistency and particularly useful in collaborative environments

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