Here is a brief how-to on creating a large, high resolution rendered Revit walkthrough (or sun study) and then subsequently compressing and uploading it to Youtube.
It took about a week for one workstation to produce this:
Feel free to share links to any files you upload to Youtube by commenting on this blog post.
- Setup your walkthrough view.
- In Revit, Export - Walkthrough and divide the total frame count of the animation into parts that have a manageable number of frames (I recommend 100).
- Do this for each part of the Walkthrough (ie. create files with frames 1-100.avi, then 101-200.avi, 201-300.avi etc). Use 'Full Frames (uncompressed)' when creating these parts.
- Use VirtualDub to join the parts together. In VirtualDub, open the first part. Press Ctrl-Right arrow (this takes you to the end of the file), then go File - Append AVI Segment... and choose the next part. Do this however many times is need to append all parts to the original file.
- In VirtualDub, go to Video - Compression and I recommend using the 'Cinepak Codec by Radius' if you have it. Quality = 100.
- In VirtualDub, go to Audio and choose 'No Audio'
- Choose Video - Full Processing Mode
- Now go File - Save as AVI and create your combined and partly compressed AVI file.
- Open Windows Movie Maker. Import the combined file into the collections.
- Drag the file into the storyboard at the bottom.
- Go to File - Publish Movie. Choose 'This computer' and click Next. Choose a filename and location and click Next.
- I recommend choosing 'Best quality for playback on my computer'. This should reduce the file to a manageable size.
- Now, open your browser and login to your Youtube account. Choose 'Upload'.
- Select the compressed video you have created, and upload it. This may take a while, so just wait patiently (or do some other work!)
- Once uploaded, you can now share the link code with Clients or others who may like to view the animation.
It took about a week for one workstation to produce this:
Feel free to share links to any files you upload to Youtube by commenting on this blog post.