REFERENCE PLANES AND WORKING PLANES: What's the difference?
Revit uses different ways to help you create and place items. Reference Planes can be named and used... or you can use Working Planes. This Revit Tip will help sort out the difference between those. I'll toss in a little bit about Reference Lines also at the end. ------- If your company needs BIM/Revit Assistance.. you can get help without hiring an in-house BIM Manager. A virtual BIM Manager (me) means you and your team can get immediate help (and ongoing assistance) without dealing with the overhead of hiring someone full time. Check out my website for more details: http://www.virtualBIMmanagement.com

▶︎
VIEW RANGE: quirks of the dreaded View Range

▶︎
CREATE PARTS: Break a wall into parts and demo specific areas of any layer

▶︎
What are Reference Planes and how to Use them - Revit Tutorial

▶︎
EP2 Understanding Work Plane and Reference Plane

▶︎
How to Read Architectural Details & Sections

▶︎
All about Reference Plane Vs Reference Line and How to use In Revit

▶︎
WORKSETS: Creating them, Using them and Deleting them

▶︎
How to use Work Planes | Revit 2020

▶︎
HIERARCHY in Visibility Graphics: Controlling how things look

▶︎
PROPERTY LINES - omg they are important

▶︎
WORKSHARING BASICS: Creating Central and Local files

▶︎
These 10 Revit Mistakes will get you Fired

▶︎
Revit Pure Live #006 - 🔨 Mastering Phases

▶︎
Revit Tutorial - 3D Work Plane Usage

▶︎
Design Options: Demystified

▶︎
KEYNOTING BASICS: Creating a new keynoting file from scratch and using it

▶︎
interior designer reviews architects plans (ep. 3)

▶︎
SLAB EDGES & THICKENED SLABS

▶︎
Revit Tutorial - Mastering Reference Planes in Families

▶︎
