Setting up an initial clash test in Navisworks

00:00

MARTHA HOLLOWELL ORCUTT: Setting up an initial clash

00:02

test in Navisworks.

00:05

Once the models from various disciplines

00:07

are aggregated together in a Navisworks file,

00:10

you can start to investigate how the models interact

00:13

with each other.

00:14

You can just move around in the model visually,

00:17

but it's much better to run a clash

00:19

test to more accurately identify the issues.

00:23

In Navisworks Manage, we're going

00:25

to open the Navisworks file set Small Hospital Combined

00:30

clash.nwf and click Open.

00:36

There are three models in this.

00:38

To see this, you can go up to the Home tab

00:41

and select Selection Tree.

00:44

Now you can see that we have the three models,

00:46

and there's one for architectural, one for systems,

00:50

and one for structural.

00:52

We're going to start our investigation by checking

00:55

clashes between structural beams and mechanical pipes,

00:59

so we don't need to see the architectural model

01:01

for this test.

01:02

In the Selection Tree, right click

01:05

on the architectural model, and select Hide.

01:08

Then we can zoom in on the area where we're

01:11

going to do our clash tests.

01:16

In the Home tab Tools panel, click Clash Detective.

01:24

In the Clash Detective window, in the upper right corner,

01:27

we're going to click Add Test.

01:30

In the Name edit box, we're going to type

01:33

in a name that matches the clash you

01:35

want to run, so in this case, structural beams and plumbing

01:39

piping.

01:40

We're going to click on the Rules tab

01:42

so that you can see that you can ignore certain clashes,

01:45

and in this case, we're not going to do any of these.

01:48

But for example, if there are some items that

01:51

are on the same layer, or other items

01:53

you don't want them to test, then click on the Select tab.

01:58

We're ready to set up our selection.

01:60

As you can see on the Select tab,

02:02

there's selection A and selection B. And each of them

02:06

have various options.

02:08

These are the same options that you

02:09

have in your Selection Tree--

02:11

Standard, Compact, and Properties.

02:14

Your standard gives you all the options

02:16

of the various items within each of your files,

02:20

whereas compact just gives you the option of the file itself.

02:26

Properties allow you to select from items, such as your room

02:30

names and then the various properties

02:32

included in the models, so, for example, material or location.

02:41

On the left-hand side, we're going

02:42

to expand our structural model, and come down and select

02:46

structural framing.

02:48

And then in selection B, we're going to select our systems,

02:52

hold down the Control key, and select Pipes and Pipe Fittings.

02:57

So those are the items we're going to check in our clash.

03:02

You can choose to do surfaces, which is the most common one

03:06

that you're going to be using.

03:08

You can also choose lines and points,

03:11

any kind of self-intersecting item,

03:14

and instead of using the list, you

03:16

could use a current selection, or select in the scene.

03:20

So these are, again, how you set up your selection sets.

03:25

In the Settings panel, you can set the type of clash--

03:28

Hard, where two objects actually intersect,

03:31

Hard Conservative, where two objects are very close,

03:35

Clearance, where two objects come

03:37

within a specific distance, for example,

03:40

if you want to have a space around objects for insulation,

03:44

and Duplicate, where two items are the exact same type

03:47

and position.

03:48

In this case, we'll run a clearance clash

03:51

using the default tolerance.

03:55

If you are using Timeliner in the clash,

03:58

you can select the link.

04:00

Now, we're ready to click Run Test.

04:04

When the test is completed, the Results tab automatically

04:07

opens.

04:08

In this example, we have about 20 clashes.

04:13

When you click on it, and move the dialog box away,

04:16

you should be able to see the clash.

04:20

If you have two screens, you might

04:21

want to go ahead and move the Clash

04:23

Detective to another screen.

04:27

You'll notice that there's one green and one red.

04:29

This is set up in the highlighting,

04:31

so your item one, the structural in this case, and the item two,

04:35

piping.

04:37

You also can set up whether you want to dim the other objects

04:41

or hide the other objects, so it depends on,

04:44

do you need to see it in context?

04:47

If you are dimming, you can choose

04:49

whether or not to have transparent dimming.

04:53

You can also set up the viewport.

04:55

And if you want to focus again on the clash,

04:58

you can quickly do that by clicking Focus on Clash.

05:02

So now, you want to go ahead and just review

05:05

all of your clashes, and in the next video,

05:07

we'll take a look at how we actually group clashes.

Video transcript

00:00

MARTHA HOLLOWELL ORCUTT: Setting up an initial clash

00:02

test in Navisworks.

00:05

Once the models from various disciplines

00:07

are aggregated together in a Navisworks file,

00:10

you can start to investigate how the models interact

00:13

with each other.

00:14

You can just move around in the model visually,

00:17

but it's much better to run a clash

00:19

test to more accurately identify the issues.

00:23

In Navisworks Manage, we're going

00:25

to open the Navisworks file set Small Hospital Combined

00:30

clash.nwf and click Open.

00:36

There are three models in this.

00:38

To see this, you can go up to the Home tab

00:41

and select Selection Tree.

00:44

Now you can see that we have the three models,

00:46

and there's one for architectural, one for systems,

00:50

and one for structural.

00:52

We're going to start our investigation by checking

00:55

clashes between structural beams and mechanical pipes,

00:59

so we don't need to see the architectural model

01:01

for this test.

01:02

In the Selection Tree, right click

01:05

on the architectural model, and select Hide.

01:08

Then we can zoom in on the area where we're

01:11

going to do our clash tests.

01:16

In the Home tab Tools panel, click Clash Detective.

01:24

In the Clash Detective window, in the upper right corner,

01:27

we're going to click Add Test.

01:30

In the Name edit box, we're going to type

01:33

in a name that matches the clash you

01:35

want to run, so in this case, structural beams and plumbing

01:39

piping.

01:40

We're going to click on the Rules tab

01:42

so that you can see that you can ignore certain clashes,

01:45

and in this case, we're not going to do any of these.

01:48

But for example, if there are some items that

01:51

are on the same layer, or other items

01:53

you don't want them to test, then click on the Select tab.

01:58

We're ready to set up our selection.

01:60

As you can see on the Select tab,

02:02

there's selection A and selection B. And each of them

02:06

have various options.

02:08

These are the same options that you

02:09

have in your Selection Tree--

02:11

Standard, Compact, and Properties.

02:14

Your standard gives you all the options

02:16

of the various items within each of your files,

02:20

whereas compact just gives you the option of the file itself.

02:26

Properties allow you to select from items, such as your room

02:30

names and then the various properties

02:32

included in the models, so, for example, material or location.

02:41

On the left-hand side, we're going

02:42

to expand our structural model, and come down and select

02:46

structural framing.

02:48

And then in selection B, we're going to select our systems,

02:52

hold down the Control key, and select Pipes and Pipe Fittings.

02:57

So those are the items we're going to check in our clash.

03:02

You can choose to do surfaces, which is the most common one

03:06

that you're going to be using.

03:08

You can also choose lines and points,

03:11

any kind of self-intersecting item,

03:14

and instead of using the list, you

03:16

could use a current selection, or select in the scene.

03:20

So these are, again, how you set up your selection sets.

03:25

In the Settings panel, you can set the type of clash--

03:28

Hard, where two objects actually intersect,

03:31

Hard Conservative, where two objects are very close,

03:35

Clearance, where two objects come

03:37

within a specific distance, for example,

03:40

if you want to have a space around objects for insulation,

03:44

and Duplicate, where two items are the exact same type

03:47

and position.

03:48

In this case, we'll run a clearance clash

03:51

using the default tolerance.

03:55

If you are using Timeliner in the clash,

03:58

you can select the link.

04:00

Now, we're ready to click Run Test.

04:04

When the test is completed, the Results tab automatically

04:07

opens.

04:08

In this example, we have about 20 clashes.

04:13

When you click on it, and move the dialog box away,

04:16

you should be able to see the clash.

04:20

If you have two screens, you might

04:21

want to go ahead and move the Clash

04:23

Detective to another screen.

04:27

You'll notice that there's one green and one red.

04:29

This is set up in the highlighting,

04:31

so your item one, the structural in this case, and the item two,

04:35

piping.

04:37

You also can set up whether you want to dim the other objects

04:41

or hide the other objects, so it depends on,

04:44

do you need to see it in context?

04:47

If you are dimming, you can choose

04:49

whether or not to have transparent dimming.

04:53

You can also set up the viewport.

04:55

And if you want to focus again on the clash,

04:58

you can quickly do that by clicking Focus on Clash.

05:02

So now, you want to go ahead and just review

05:05

all of your clashes, and in the next video,

05:07

we'll take a look at how we actually group clashes.

Try it: Setting up an initial clash test in Navisworks. 

  1. In Navisworks Manage , open the Navisworks File Set SMALL_HOSPITAL_COMBINED-Clash.nwf.   
  2. In the Home tab > Select & Search panel> click Selection Tree. You can see that this file set has three models linked in:
    56750_A.nwc – architectural and site content
    56750_M_Systems.nwc – mechanical, electrical, and Plumbing content
    56750_S.nwc – structural content
  3. We are going to start our investigation by checking clashes between Structural Beams and Mechanical Pipes. Since we do not need to see the architectural model for this test, in the Selection Tree, right-click on the architectural model and select Hide.
  4. In the Home tab > Tools panel, click Clash Detective.
  5. In the Clash Detective window, in the upper right corner, click Add Test.
  6. In the Name edit box, type in a name that matches the clash you want to run. In this case, Structural Beams and Plumbing Piping.
  7. In the Rules tab, review the existing rules that come with the software. These rules instruct the program to ignore clashes between typical issue that are not important in your clash. You can also create new rules.
  8. Now you are ready to define what you see in the clash. In the Select tab, in the Selection A panel, expand 56750_S.nwc (the structural model). Select Structural Framing. The on-off toggle buttons allow you to select from Surfaces (the most likely), as well as lines, points, and self-intersecting geometry.  You can also use a current selection on the screen or select items on the screen if you want to only run a clash in a specific part of the models.
  9. In the Section B panel, expand 56750_M_Systems.nwc and select Pipe Fittings , hold down the Ctrl key and select Pipes.
  10. In the Settings panel, you can set the type of clash: Hard – where two objects actually intersect, Hard (Conservative) where two objects are very close , Clearance – where two objects come within a specific distance – for example you may want to have space around objects for insulation, and Duplicate – where the two items are the exact same type and position. In this case we will run a Clearance clash using the default tolerance.
  11. Link – to TimeLiner or animation.
  12. Click Run Test.
  13. When the test is completed the Results tab automatically opens. In this example we have 20 clashes. (CHECK THIS). 
  14. Let’s review  a few of these clashes. Move or resize the Clash Detective window so you can see the model. Click on one of the clashes and it automatically zooms in on the part of the model. The main part of the model is changed to wireframe so the clashes stand out.
  15. Click through several clashes.
  16. In the Clash Detective, in the Display Settings area, you can modify how clashes are highlighted and Isolated as well as set the viewpoint – Auto-update automatically zooms in on the clash. 
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