Scheduling#
The final step is keeping the rigging schedule and the model in agreement. Because your linesets carry their distance and designation as parameters, you can schedule them with Revit's standard scheduling tools and rely on Performance Rigging to keep the values accurate.
Create a rigging schedule#
Use Revit's Schedule/Quantities tool on the Specialty Equipment category and add the lineset fields you care about — designation, name, distance, and any type flags. The values come straight from the lineset parameters the add-in maintains.
Keep the schedule and model in step#
Two situations break the agreement between schedule and model, and each has a command:
| Situation | Command | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Someone moved linesets in the model | Sync Schedule | Distances in the schedule update to match the model. |
| You moved the reference plane, or edited scheduled distances | Update Locations | Linesets move in the model to match the schedule. |
Both commands report how many linesets are out of sync and ask you to confirm before changing anything. If the linesets are pinned, unpin them before running Update Locations so they can move.
Let it stay in sync automatically#
To avoid running the sync commands by hand, enable automatic updates:
- On the Linesets panel, click Enable Lineset Updater.
From then on, the add-in reconciles dynamically scheduled linesets as you move or edit them. Disable the updater at any time by clicking the button again.
You're done#
You have prepared linesets, set a reference, built and numbered a run, and connected it all to a live schedule. From here, the Working with Linesets section is the reference for each command, and the FAQ covers common questions.