Bluebeam Revu => Revu General Topics => Topic started by: Steve on June 27, 2018, 11:49:35 AM
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I have a drawing package of about 180 drawings total. There are 4 addenda to this project and each one has about 80 revised drawings attached to each. I am wanting to place them all into a SET. This is normally not a problem. However, the Architect has, for about a dozen drawings, made some changes that have me stumped as to how to bring in the revisions.
For example, in the original drawing set there is a drawing (named and labeled) "R-A321 - EXTERIOR ELEVATIONS - SOUTH (RESIDENCE INN).PDF". In Addendum #1, the architect has changed that drawing's name to "R-A314 - EXTERIOR ELEVATIONS - SOUTH (RESIDENCE INN).PDF" and added a brand new drawing "R-A321 - BRICK COLOR LOCATIONS - (RESIDENCE INN) NORTH.PDF".
So if I bring the Addendum #2 drawings into the set as revisions, the renamed drawing (from R-A321 to R-A314) won't come into the set and replace the original with the revised and mark the original "superseded" because the names don't match. So I will have three files listed in the set after adding the revised drawings rather than one new and one "superseded".
Is there a way to manually tell one file to replace the other as a revision if their names/labels don't match, when adding revised files into an existing set?
Thanks in advance
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Did you try a search of the Bluebeam forums? Oh, wait, ........ never mind. >:(
What I do for a set, is always split the drawings and rename the files by sheet number. (R-A321.pdf, R-A314.pdf, etc.) I do NOT save changes to the original architects file.
They will at least slip-sheet/supersede correctly. You can easily cut/paste markups from one page to the other.
The reason I do this is I have seen files named
"R-A321 - BRICK COLOR LOCATIONS. pdf" changed to
"R-A321-BRICK COLOR LOCATIONS.pdf" which screws things up.
This slight change in file name is easy to miss.
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Yes - but my problem is that in the addenda process, R-A321 changed numbers (and name) to R-A314 and added a NEW drawing that used the previous number of R-A321. But the R-A321 drawings are not the same drawing revised. R-A321 and R-A314 ARE the same drawing revised - but with the # and name changed.
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Yeah, I get it.
I guess what I have decided to follow as a convention is to supersede drawing sets by their sheet number, rather than what is on them, or what they are named.
Most of the time this works well. Once in a while, architects screw things up and it makes life a little more difficult. Thankfully, this is rare.