Autodesk Certified Professional in Revit for Electrical Design Version: Demo [ Total Questions: 10] Web: www.certsout.com Email: support@certsout.com Autodesk RVT_ELEC_01101 IMPORTANT NOTICE Feedback We have developed quality product and state-of-art service to ensure our customers interest. If you have any suggestions, please feel free to contact us at feedback@certsout.com Support If you have any questions about our product, please provide the following items: exam code screenshot of the question login id/email please contact us at and our technical experts will provide support within 24 hours. support@certsout.com Copyright The product of each order has its own encryption code, so you should use it independently. Any unauthorized changes will inflict legal punishment. We reserve the right of final explanation for this statement. Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 1 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool A. B. C. D. Category Breakdown Category Number of Questions Families, Connectors, and Parameters 5 Lighting and Switch Systems 2 Electrical Systems and Circuiting 2 Conduit and Cable Tray Modeling 1 TOTAL 10 Question #:1 - [Families, Connectors, and Parameters] Refer to exhibit. An electrical designer is reviewing the Type Properties for a floor plan view. How will the view behove when creating a new floor plan? The Electrical Plan view template will be assigned to a new floor plan view created with the Floor Plan tool with the Floor Plan type selected Creating a new floor plan view using the Floor Plan tool with the Floor Plan type selected will create a new Electrical Plan view template. When duplicating a floor plan view of any type, the Electrical Plan view template will be assigned to the new floor plan view. A new floor plan view created by duplicating a floor plan view of the Floor Plan type will be duplicated as a dependent view. Answer: A Explanation The exhibit shown displays the for a view type. Type Properties dialog box System Family: Floor Plan Within the “Identity Data” group, there are two critical parameters that govern the behavior of new views created from this view type: “View Template applied to new views” Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 2 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool A. B. C. “New views are dependent on template” According to Autodesk Revit’s documentation in the (Chapter 48 “Views and View Revit MEP User’s Guide Templates” and Chapter 49 “Preparing Construction Documents”): “When a view template is assigned to a view type through the Type Properties dialog, any new view created from that view type automatically receives the defined view template. This ensures consistent visibility, graphics, and discipline settings for all new views.” In this image, the parameter is set to , and “View Template applied to new views” Electrical Plan “New is checked. This means that views are dependent on template” any new floor plan created using this type , and the view will be will automatically have the Electrical Plan template applied dependent on that , meaning it inherits all its visibility and annotation control settings. template This ensures that all electrical floor plan views generated are standardized and visually consistent, a fundamental practice in , as described in the Revit Electrical Design workflows Smithsonian Facilities Revit : Template User’s Guide “Assigning a default view template to a view type (e.g., Electrical Plan) ensures every new view created follows organizational and graphical standards without manual setup.” Option A matches this behavior exactly. Option B is incorrect** because Revit does not create a new template automatically. Option C is incorrect** because duplication of an existing view does not reassign templates by type. Option D is incorrect** because dependent view creation requires a specific “Duplicate as Dependent” command, not this setting. References: Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide – Chapter 48 “Views and View Templates,” pp. 1112–1115 Smithsonian Facilities Revit Template User’s Guide – Section 2.8.1 “View Types and View Templates,” p. 30 Autodesk Revit Electrical Design Essentials – View Template Application and Management Section Question #:2 - [Lighting and Switch Systems] An electrical designer has noticed lighting fixtures present in an architectural linked model. Which tool should be used to place an instance of those fixtures in the current electrical model while maintaining the position from the architectural model? Copy/Monitor Coordination Review Reconcile Hosting Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 3 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool D. Reload Latest Answer: A Explanation When lighting fixtures placed in an need to be replicated in the architectural linked model electrical model while maintaining their , the correct tool is exact positions Copy/Monitor This Revit feature allows the electrical designer to —like lighting fixtures—from a copy elements linked into their project, while establishing a between the original (architectural) model monitoring relationship and copied (electrical) instances. From the Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide – Chapter 55 “Multi-Discipline Coordination” (pages 1349– 1357): “Use the Copy/Monitor tool to copy MEP fixtures from an architectural model into an MEP project, and monitor them for changes.” (Revit MEP User’s Guide, p. 1350) “To copy fixtures from a linked model: Click Collaborate tab # Coordinate panel # Copy/Monitor # Select Link. Select the linked architectural model in the drawing area. Click and select the lighting fixtures to copy. Copy Click Revit MEP copies the fixtures to the current project and establishes monitoring Finish. relationships.”* (Revit MEP User’s Guide, p. 1356) Behavior and Benefits: The maintain the as in the copied lighting fixtures same location, orientation, and type mapping linked model. Any (move, delete, or modify) made by the architect in the linked model will changes trigger a in the electrical model. coordination review This ensures accurate positioning and easy coordination between disciplines. “When you select a copied fixture in the current project, the monitor icon displays next to the fixture, indicating that it has a relationship with the original fixture in the linked model.” (Revit MEP User’s Guide, p. 1357) “If copied fixtures are moved, changed, or deleted in the linked model, Revit MEP notifies the engineers of the changes during Coordination Review.” Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 4 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool A. B. C. D. A. B. C. D. (Revit MEP User’s Guide, p. 1357) Question #:3 - [Families, Connectors, and Parameters] An electrical designer wants to schedule parameters from generic annotations Which type of schedule must be created? A Generic Family schedule A Generic Annotation schedule A Note Block D. A Sheet List Answer: C Explanation When an electrical designer wants to , the correct method is schedule parameters from Generic Annotations to use a , not a generic schedule. Revit documentation defines this process clearly under Note Block Annotation Schedules (Note Blocks): “Annotation schedules, or note blocks, list all instances of annotations that you can add using the Symbol tool.” “Creating an Annotation Schedule (Note Block): Load the generic annotation family or families into your project and place them where desired. Click View tab # Create panel # Schedules drop-down # Note Block. In the New Note Block dialog, for Family, select a generic annotation. ” This extract confirms that when working with , Revit requires the use of a generic annotation families Note to extract and list their parameters in a schedule. Standard schedules such as Generic Model or Family Block schedules cannot access data from Generic Annotations since they are annotation-based, not model-based. Question #:4 - [Electrical Systems and Circuiting] How can an electrical designer see changes from other users without saving their own work to the central model? Relinquish All Mine Reload Latest Manage Worksets Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 5 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool D. Worksharing Display Answer: B Explanation In Autodesk Revit, particularly for electrical and MEP design disciplines using a workshared model, the command allows a designer to see changes made by other users “Reload Latest” without saving or . This tool ensures that while the designer continues to work publishing their own work to the central model locally, their environment stays updated with the latest modifications made by colleagues. According to the , under the section Autodesk Revit MEP User Guide (Chapter 54 – Working in a Team) , it states: Loading Updates from the Central Model “As you work, you can see the changes other team members have made to the project after they have been synchronized with the central model. You can load updates from the central model without publishing your changes to the central model. In your local file, click .” Collaborate tab # Synchronize panel # (Reload Latest) This confirms that the command refreshes your local file with any modifications from the Reload Latest central file that others have synchronized, but it does not send your local changes back. It is a critical feature for coordination in a team environment, especially when multiple designers—such as electrical, mechanical, and structural engineers—are contributing simultaneously to a shared BIM model. By contrast: A. Relinquish All Mine only releases ownership of elements but doesn’t update the local model. C. Manage Worksets is for controlling visibility and editability of worksets. D. Worksharing Display visually identifies ownership and status but doesn’t refresh model data. Therefore, when an electrical designer needs to review updates from others (for example, when a lighting layout needs coordination with architectural ceiling adjustments), the proper workflow is to use Reload Latest , ensuring all new information from the central model appears instantly without saving or affecting their current unsaved edits. References: Autodesk Revit MEP 2011 User’s Guide, , “Loading Updates from the Chapter 54: Working in a Team Central Model,” pp. 1332–1333. Autodesk Revit Structure User’s Guide, , “Loading Updates from the Central Chapter 49: Working in a Team Model,” p. 1230. Smithsonian Revit Template Guide (2021), Section 6.3.1 , confirming How Worksharing Works synchronization and reloading behavior for shared Revit environments. Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 6 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool A. B. C. D. Question #:5 - [Conduit and Cable Tray Modeling] Refer to the exhibit. An electrical designer models a cable tray in a project and decides to check the box (or Use Annot. Scale tor Single Line Fittings and change the Cable Tray Fitting Annotation Size to 1/8" (3 mm). What is the result? (The image is presented m Imperial units: 1 In = 25 mm (Metric units rounded].) All cable tray fittings in the project are changed per the new settings. All cable tray fittings in the project change per the new settings when a views detail level is set to Fine. New cable tray fittings use the new settings in views set to 1/8" (3 mm) scale. New cable tray fittings use the new settings after the change. Answer: A Explanation In Autodesk , the dialog box contains project-wide configuration parameters Revit MEP Electrical Settings that affect all electrical systems, including . This dialog allows users to control Cable Tray Settings annotation scales, fitting symbols, and text size for documentation purposes. The option labeled determines whether the cable tray fittings’ “Use Annot. Scale for Single Line Fittings” annotation graphics automatically scale according to the view’s annotation scale. When this box is , checked the annotation symbol size for fittings adjusts proportionally to the scale of the view. Similarly, defines the annotation size for cable tray fittings in single- “Cable Tray Fitting Annotation Size” line representations (schematic views or simplified plan representations). Changing this parameter (for instance, from ¾” to #”) modifies the visual representation for all cable tray fittings in the project, globally since the dialog is a , not a per-instance or per-view override. Electrical Settings project-wide configuration According to the : Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide (Electrical Systems – Cable Trays) “Electrical settings define how cable trays and conduit are displayed throughout the project. Any change made to these settings, such as annotation size or use of annotation scaling, affects all related fittings and components in the project model.” Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 7 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool A. B. C. D. Therefore, once the designer checks the box for and changes the Use Annot. Scale for Single Line Fittings to 1/8” (3 mm), across the entire project will update Cable Tray Fitting Annotation Size all cable tray fittings to reflect these new settings. Question #:6 - [Families, Connectors, and Parameters] Refer to exhibit. An electrical designer tries to place a generic annotation family in a data device family. The designer receives the error message as shown. What should the designer do? Change the Detail Level to Coarse. Edit the generic annotation family and set it to Shared. Set the view to the Ref. Level. Select the Maintain Annotation Orientation parameter checkbox Answer: B Explanation The warning message — — appears “Can’t create this kind of element in this view in the current mode” when an electrical designer attempts to place a Generic Annotation family inside a model family (e.g., a that is not configured to host annotation elements. data device or electrical fixture) According to the , families are Revit Electrical Design documentation Generic Annotation 2D annotation , and therefore, The elements cannot be created or viewed in 3D model views unless configured as “Shared.” official guide clarifies: “You can create generic annotation families and nest them inside host model families so that the annotations display in the project.” However, this only functions correctly if the annotation is enabled to act independently within the host: “To allow a nested annotation to be visible and editable when placed in a host model family, the nested annotation must be set to before loading it into the host.” Shared If the nested annotation is not set to , Revit cannot create or display it in the host’s model view, Shared triggering this exact warning. Thus, the correct workflow is: Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 8 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool Open the in the Generic Annotation family Family Editor Go to Family Category and Parameters Check the box under Family Parameters. “Shared” Save and the family into the host electrical device family. reload Other options—changing view level, detail level, or annotation orientation—do not resolve this placement restriction. Question #:7 - [Families, Connectors, and Parameters] An electrical designer receives an architectural model and links it into the electrical model. The designer wants to use the Copy/Monitor tool to copy the exact electrical fixtures created by the architect. The designer also wants the software to automatically detect new electrical fixtures added to the architectural model. Select the correct coordination settings from the drop-down lists Answer: Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 9 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool Explanation When working on , the tool enables linked architectural and electrical Revit models Copy/Monitor electrical designers to copy selected elements (such as lighting or electrical fixtures) from the architectural model into their electrical model. This workflow ensures that any subsequent modifications to these elements in the architectural file are automatically detected and flagged for coordination review. According to the (Chapter 46 “Copy/Monitor and Coordination Review”): Revit MEP User’s Guide Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 10 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool “Use to copy elements from a linked model so that changes to the original elements are Copy/Monitor tracked. When copying multiple similar elements, select to automatically copy all instances Allow batch copy of that category.” The dialog provides two primary behavioral controls for each category (such as Coordination Settings Electrical Fixtures): 1## Copy Behavior Allow batch copy: Automatically copies all elements of the selected category from the linked architectural model to the host electrical model. This option is ideal for electrical fixtures because it ensures all instances are copied efficiently without manual selection and allows future synchronization. 2## Mapping Behavior Copy original: Creates an exact duplicate of the architectural family in the electrical model without substituting family types or parameters. This ensures full fidelity with the architect’s fixtures and enables Revit to automatically detect newly added or modified elements in the linked model for coordination review. The also confirms this workflow: Smithsonian Facilities Revit Template User’s Guide “Set Copy Behavior to and Mapping Behavior to when monitoring shared Allow batch copy Copy original architectural elements like lighting fixtures, ensuring accurate duplication and automatic update tracking.” These settings allow Revit to issue coordination warnings such as “Instance of link needs Coordination whenever the architectural model is updated, maintaining synchronization across disciplines. Review” References: Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide – Chapter 46 “Copy/Monitor and Coordination Review,” pp. 1084–1090 Smithsonian Facilities Revit Template User’s Guide – Section 3.4 “Coordination and Copy/Monitor Setup,” p. 87 Autodesk Revit Electrical Design Essentials – “Linking Architectural Models and Synchronizing Electrical Fixtures” Question #:8 - [Families, Connectors, and Parameters] Refer to exhibit. Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 11 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool An electrical designer wants to organize the Protect Browser as shown in the exhibit. Select the correct options in order to achieve the desired organization. (Select three.) Answer: Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 12 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool Explanation Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 13 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool C:\Users\Waqas Shahid\Desktop\Mudassir\Untitled.jpg In , the can be customized to organize views according to Autodesk Revit Electrical Design Project Browser disciplines, levels, and view types using the dialog box. This feature Browser Organization Properties allows electrical designers to create structured view hierarchies that align with project standards and simplify navigation — especially in multidisciplinary projects. According to the (Chapter 41 “Browser Organization and View Management”): Revit MEP User’s Guide “Browser organization defines how project views are grouped and displayed in the Project Browser. You can customize sorting by , or any parameter applicable to views.” Discipline, Level, View Type In the given exhibit, the structure shows views grouped first by (“Coordination,” Project Browser discipline “Electrical”), then by (“Level 1,” “Level 2”), and finally by (e.g., “Floor Plans,” “Ceiling level view type Plans”). This organization allows the electrical designer to isolate MEP-related views while maintaining logical grouping under each building level. Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 14 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool A. B. C. D. To achieve this layout, the designer must apply the following browser organization setup in the Browser dialog box: Organization Properties 1## – creates top-level folders such as , , , etc. Group by: Discipline Architectural Structural Electrical 2## – organizes each discipline into subfolders based on floor levels (Level 1, Then by: Associated Level Level 2, etc.). 3## – further organizes the level folders into view categories (e.g., , Then by: Family and Type Floor Plans ). Ceiling Plans This configuration is supported by the : Smithsonian Facilities Revit Template User’s Guide “Grouping by Discipline, Level, and View Type provides logical organization for MEP coordination, facilitating efficient access to electrical floor and ceiling plan views.” Sorting by ensures consistent alphabetical listing under each category. View Name (Ascending) References: Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide – Chapter 41 “Browser Organization and View Management,” pp. 896– 903 Smithsonian Facilities Revit Template User’s Guide – Section 2.8 “Browser View and Sheet Organization Settings,” pp. 28–30 Autodesk Revit Electrical Design Essentials – “Project Browser Customization for MEP Disciplines” Question #:9 - [Electrical Systems and Circuiting] How can an arrowhead be added to a lag leader line? Change the Leader Type to Free End. Enable Leader Arrowhead in the instance properties. Choose an arrow type for the Leader Arrowhead in the Type Properties. Select the tag and enable Leader Line in the Properties palette Answer: C Explanation In , arrowheads on leader lines—such as those used with tags, text Autodesk Revit for Electrical Design notes, or annotations—are controlled through , not through instance properties or free-end Type Properties options. Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 15 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool A. B. C. D. According to the (Chapter 47 and 42), the section Revit MEP User’s Guide – Annotating Chapter “Modifying explains: Tags” “Select the tag, and on the Properties palette, click (Edit Type). In the Type Properties dialog, select a value to add an arrowhead to the leader line.” for Leader Arrowhead This confirms that the arrowhead is , meaning any change applies to all tags or text defined at the type level notes of that annotation type throughout the project. The property allows the designer to Leader Arrowhead choose from predefined arrowhead styles (like “Filled Arrow,” “Dot,” “Tick Mark,” etc.), which are defined globally under: Manage tab # Settings panel # Additional Settings # Arrowheads. Furthermore, the document specifies under “Leader Arrowhead Properties”: “Sets the arrowhead shape on the leader line. The value is the name of the arrowhead style defined by the Arrowheads tool.” This behavior applies to all annotation categories, including text notes, keynotes, material tags, and electrical device tags, maintaining consistency across all view types in an electrical project. Therefore, is the correct answer because arrowheads are configured via , while the Option C Type Properties other options are inaccurate: Option A (Free End) only defines leader attachment behavior. Option B (Instance properties) does not include a “Leader Arrowhead” toggle. Option D (Enable Leader Line) only adds or removes a leader line, not the arrowhead style. References: Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide – Chapter 47 “Annotating,” pp. 1040–1055 Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide – Chapter 42 “Text Notes and Tags,” pp. 936–949 Autodesk Revit Electrical Design Essentials – “Leader Arrowhead Properties and Annotation Standards” Question #:10 - [Lighting and Switch Systems] An electrical designer is adding lights to a project model. The coiling grids arc located in a linked Revit model. How are these lights affected if the grid patterns move? The lights do not move with the pattern but will stay associated with the ceiling if hosted The lights move with the pattern if they are alignment-locked to the ceiling and hosted. The lights do not follow grid pattern movement unless they are non-hosted. Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 16 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool D. The lights move with the pattern if they are defined as ceiling-hosted types. Answer: A Explanation When working in , lighting fixtures can be either (such as Autodesk Revit for MEP Electrical Design hosted ceiling-hosted or wall-hosted) or . The movement of lighting fixtures in relation to linked model non-hosted elements—like ceiling grids—is determined by the hosting condition and alignment constraints applied to those elements. According to the (Chapter 24 “Ceilings” and Chapter 50 “Rendering”), a ceiling is a Revit MEP User’s Guide . You can create it on a specified level and host ceiling-based families such as lighting level-based element fixtures. When a ceiling is modified or repositioned, the hosted lighting fixtures will move with the ceiling , maintaining their relationship to the host surface. However, when ceiling grid patterns are changed or itself moved in a , the movement of those grid patterns does to linked Revit model not automatically propagate hosted elements in the electrical model unless those elements are directly linked or constrained to a movable reference plane. As described: “Ceilings are level-based elements... When you create a ceiling, you can host components such as lighting fixtures on its face. Hosted elements remain associated with their host even if the ceiling is modified.” And further in the glossary section: “Rehost: To move a component from one host to another. For example, you can use the tool to Pick New Host move a window from one wall to another wall.” This confirms that but not a hosted light fixture maintains its attachment to the host element (the ceiling) to the grid pattern itself. Grid movement within a does not alter the position of lights linked ceiling model unless they are manually re-hosted or alignment-locked directly to a specific geometry within the host model. Therefore, the correct interpretation is that when ceiling grid patterns move within a , the linked Revit model lights placed in the electrical model do follow the grid pattern movement automatically. They remain not stationary relative to the ceiling surface, provided they are hosted correctly. This behavior reflects Revit’s — “hosted elements maintain dependency only on parametric relationships their host, not on graphical references like grids unless locked via constraints.” References: Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide, Chapter 24 “Ceilings”, pp. 579–583 Autodesk Revit MEP User’s Guide, Chapter 50 “Rendering” (Lighting Fixtures and Hosts) Autodesk Revit Glossary: “Rehost” definition, p. 2037 Revit Electrical Design Parametric Model Behavior – Revit MEP Essentials Autodesk - RVT_ELEC_01101 Certs Exam 17 of 17 Pass with Valid Exam Questions Pool About certsout.com certsout.com was founded in 2007. We provide latest & high quality IT / Business Certification Training Exam Questions, Study Guides, Practice Tests. We help you pass any IT / Business Certification Exams with 100% Pass Guaranteed or Full Refund. Especially Cisco, CompTIA, Citrix, EMC, HP, Oracle, VMware, Juniper, Check Point, LPI, Nortel, EXIN and so on. 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