














Save on the products you need with the AEC Collection and discover the toolkit that expands your skill set.
Save on the products you need with the PDM Collection and discover the toolkit that expands your skill set.
PDM Collection includes:
Save on the products you need with the ME Collection and discover the toolkit that expands your skill set.
Understand reference plan properties.
Type:
Tutorial
Length:
4 min.
Transcript
00:03
We'll create a new family and set up our reference planes
00:07
to do this. Let's select the file ribbon
00:10
and on the file ribbon, we'll go to new
00:13
and family.
00:16
In this example here, we're going to go ahead and use generic model
00:21
and click open
00:25
by default. In the family editor, you'll notice that ref
00:28
level is now active and we have our two reference planes.
00:32
Once again, these are pinned and these define the origin by default.
00:38
So here we might want to set up
00:40
a parametric framework to make the insertion point static
00:43
and have the family increase from that center point
00:47
to do this. I'm going to need to create extra reference planes.
00:51
Let's go ahead and select the create ribbon
00:54
and on the create ribbon you'll see here, we have the reference plain.
00:58
I'll select reference plane
01:00
and you can see on the draw panel, we have two options
01:04
line or pick lines.
01:07
In this case here, I'm going to go ahead and use pick lines,
01:12
I can set an offset in here. So here I'm going to set this 1 to 12 inches
01:18
and notice here that when I hover my cursor over one of these reference planes.
01:22
The offset is now previewed. I'm gonna have a reference plane off to the right here.
01:27
Another one to the left,
01:29
another one to the top and another one to the bottom.
01:34
We now want to make sure that these reference planes remain equal
01:39
to do this. We'll select the annotates ribbon
01:42
and on the annotate ribbon, we can select the aligned dimension tool
01:47
here.
01:48
I'm going to place a simple align dimension across these three vertical planes
01:53
and notice when I place them down, I have the option to make those equal.
01:57
I'll do the same on the three horizontal planes.
02:01
Again, place the dimensions down
02:03
and make them equal.
02:07
I'll now press escape to leave the dimension tool.
02:10
And now when I select one of these reference planes on the side,
02:13
as I drag my cursor,
02:15
you can see those reference planes will now remain equal about
02:18
the insertion point or the center point of our reference planes.
02:22
So this is the fundamental skill that you'll need
02:25
to set up the parametric framework of certain families.
02:29
Another very important thing is to make sure that you name these reference planes,
02:33
this will become very useful in our project environment.
02:36
So for example, if I select this reference plane on the right hand side here,
02:40
you'll notice here that we can click to name
02:43
or I can set the name in the property's pad it.
02:47
So here I might want to type in right face
02:52
for example, here I might want to type in left face
02:59
and this can be very, very useful when we have complex reference planes set up.
03:03
And then what you'll notice here is if we just hop around our cursor over this,
03:06
we'll get a tool tip, displaying the reference plane name.
03:10
And as you've already seen that would also be exposed in the
03:14
project environment when we want a dimension or align to these planes.
Video transcript
00:03
We'll create a new family and set up our reference planes
00:07
to do this. Let's select the file ribbon
00:10
and on the file ribbon, we'll go to new
00:13
and family.
00:16
In this example here, we're going to go ahead and use generic model
00:21
and click open
00:25
by default. In the family editor, you'll notice that ref
00:28
level is now active and we have our two reference planes.
00:32
Once again, these are pinned and these define the origin by default.
00:38
So here we might want to set up
00:40
a parametric framework to make the insertion point static
00:43
and have the family increase from that center point
00:47
to do this. I'm going to need to create extra reference planes.
00:51
Let's go ahead and select the create ribbon
00:54
and on the create ribbon you'll see here, we have the reference plain.
00:58
I'll select reference plane
01:00
and you can see on the draw panel, we have two options
01:04
line or pick lines.
01:07
In this case here, I'm going to go ahead and use pick lines,
01:12
I can set an offset in here. So here I'm going to set this 1 to 12 inches
01:18
and notice here that when I hover my cursor over one of these reference planes.
01:22
The offset is now previewed. I'm gonna have a reference plane off to the right here.
01:27
Another one to the left,
01:29
another one to the top and another one to the bottom.
01:34
We now want to make sure that these reference planes remain equal
01:39
to do this. We'll select the annotates ribbon
01:42
and on the annotate ribbon, we can select the aligned dimension tool
01:47
here.
01:48
I'm going to place a simple align dimension across these three vertical planes
01:53
and notice when I place them down, I have the option to make those equal.
01:57
I'll do the same on the three horizontal planes.
02:01
Again, place the dimensions down
02:03
and make them equal.
02:07
I'll now press escape to leave the dimension tool.
02:10
And now when I select one of these reference planes on the side,
02:13
as I drag my cursor,
02:15
you can see those reference planes will now remain equal about
02:18
the insertion point or the center point of our reference planes.
02:22
So this is the fundamental skill that you'll need
02:25
to set up the parametric framework of certain families.
02:29
Another very important thing is to make sure that you name these reference planes,
02:33
this will become very useful in our project environment.
02:36
So for example, if I select this reference plane on the right hand side here,
02:40
you'll notice here that we can click to name
02:43
or I can set the name in the property's pad it.
02:47
So here I might want to type in right face
02:52
for example, here I might want to type in left face
02:59
and this can be very, very useful when we have complex reference planes set up.
03:03
And then what you'll notice here is if we just hop around our cursor over this,
03:06
we'll get a tool tip, displaying the reference plane name.
03:10
And as you've already seen that would also be exposed in the
03:14
project environment when we want a dimension or align to these planes.
How to buy
Privacy | Do not sell or share my personal information | Cookie preferences | Report noncompliance | Terms of use | Legal | © 2025 Autodesk Inc. All rights reserved
Sign in for the best experience
Save your progress
Get access to courses
Receive personalized recommendations
May we collect and use your data?
Learn more about the Third Party Services we use and our Privacy Statement.May we collect and use your data to tailor your experience?
Explore the benefits of a customized experience by managing your privacy settings for this site or visit our Privacy Statement to learn more about your options.