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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
      last edited by

      @Carnival-Boy said:

      I'm not sure who would have disabled it. It wasn't me. 16GB RAM isn't actually very much for the type of software that runs on this workstation (graphics based).

      If you are pushing the memory limits in any way (using the majority of it), then having the page file turned on should really help. Windows will page out what it thinks is unneeded and use the real memory for performance enhancing things like buffers and cache. It's an intelligent algorithm designed to maximize performance given the available resources. Tends to work pretty well. Same as UNIX does.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
        last edited by

        @Carnival-Boy said:

        I never know how to spec workstations. Is this an area of expertise for you? How do you know when the graphics card has run out of RAM? I know 16GB is listed by Autodesk as as the minimum required RAM for complex assemblies. We currently use Nvidia K2000 cards and they only have 2GB RAM, but it starts getting very expensive to buy anything better.

        You are correct. 16GB is a "lot" but for real CAD workstations, it's nothing crazy at all. 24-32GB is realistic. There is a ton of potential modeling data that isn't graphical data that has to go into memory.

        K2000 are nice but rather on the lower end for commercial CAD applications. If you are running out of 2GB of video memory you will likely really, really know it. It can't just use system memory and "go slower", if the graphics rendering doesn't fit into the memory, then it doesn't fit and that's it. It's extremely unlikely that you are out of GPU memory, unless you are doing some crazy CUDA offload work separate from your graphics (not likely, but possible.) It's only system memory that you have to worry about. The application assumes that 2GB is basically the standard that it is going to get, you can get more, but 2GB is still extremely common.

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        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
          last edited by

          @Carnival-Boy said:

          After all, I believe Toy Story was created on a workstation less powerful than the ones we use and Toy Story is way better than anything my users have ever produced!

          Toy Story was "created" on a workstation long ago. But it was rendered on a massive computational cluster. I have friends who run those systems for movies on par with that and those are hundreds of millions of dollars in high end HPCs that each node has way more power than your workstations.

          The difference is that you both create and render on a single device. So the workstation power that you need is higher, but only a little because you are rendering only one thing and only for one person. Toy Story had to render at crazy quality, millions of scenes, many times.

          thanksajdotcomT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
            last edited by

            @Carnival-Boy said:

            I'm wondering if cloud rendering is the way to go though?

            Not likely for CAD. Requires a lot of bandwidth and CAD doesn't actually render all that much. The cost would likely pay for you to get higher end GPUs very quickly and higher end GPUs should get you a lot more mileage. Going to cloud rendering means a LONG wait for everything. Like hours. It's useful for post production shops that work all day then submit their rendering job online to run for a few days. Over the period of days, the speed of the online system makes up for the long upload, download and queue times.

            C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • thanksajdotcomT
              thanksajdotcom @Carnival Boy
              last edited by

              @Carnival-Boy said:

              I never know how to spec workstations. Is this an area of expertise for you? How do you know when the graphics card has run out of RAM? I know 16GB is listed by Autodesk as as the minimum required RAM for complex assemblies. We currently use Nvidia K2000 cards and they only have 2GB RAM, but it starts getting very expensive to buy anything better.

              Of course, my users all say their workstations are great when I first get them, but after a year or so they are bitching and whining about needing something more powerful. Generally I find that users adjust their workflow according to the spec of their machine, so the more power you give them, the more they will consume. After all, I believe Toy Story was created on a workstation less powerful than the ones we use and Toy Story is way better than anything my users have ever produced!

              I'm wondering if cloud rendering is the way to go though?

              I'm finding more and more people will load up a system with RAM but not get an equivalent processor. Having 16GB of RAM and a GPU with 2GB of RAM (assuming DDR5 but not sure what that card has) is important, but if you have an i3 or low-to-mid-range i5, that will be your bottleneck. Chances are your disk won't be your bottleneck, but there is always that as a possibility too.

              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • thanksajdotcomT
                thanksajdotcom @scottalanmiller
                last edited by

                @scottalanmiller said:

                @Carnival-Boy said:

                After all, I believe Toy Story was created on a workstation less powerful than the ones we use and Toy Story is way better than anything my users have ever produced!

                Toy Story was "created" on a workstation long ago. But it was rendered on a massive computational cluster. I have friends who run those systems for movies on par with that and those are hundreds of millions of dollars in high end HPCs that each node has way more power than your workstations.

                The difference is that you both create and render on a single device. So the workstation power that you need is higher, but only a little because you are rendering only one thing and only for one person. Toy Story had to render at crazy quality, millions of scenes, many times.

                It's still pretty remarkable that they made Toy Story back in the 90s, considering the technology of the time.

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                • C
                  Carnival Boy @scottalanmiller
                  last edited by

                  @scottalanmiller said:

                  Not likely for CAD. Requires a lot of bandwidth and CAD doesn't actually render all that much

                  Not for CAD per se, we render for our sales brochures and technical manuals. So the graphics guys will take the drawings from the design department and, well, sexy them up I guess. This can take several hours of processing. I don't generally get involved, so I'm not really sure exactly what we do. I'm pretty sure what we do is overkill, but that's just another bugbear of mine!

                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @thanksajdotcom
                    last edited by

                    @thanksaj said:

                    I'm finding more and more people will load up a system with RAM but not get an equivalent processor. Having 16GB of RAM and a GPU with 2GB of RAM (assuming DDR5 but not sure what that card has) is important, but if you have an i3 or low-to-mid-range i5, that will be your bottleneck. Chances are your disk won't be your bottleneck, but there is always that as a possibility too.

                    I don't think that you'll find any functioning CAD shop running anything less than an i7. It is normal to run Xeons.

                    coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                      last edited by

                      @Carnival-Boy said:

                      @scottalanmiller said:

                      Not likely for CAD. Requires a lot of bandwidth and CAD doesn't actually render all that much

                      Not for CAD per se, we render for our sales brochures and technical manuals. So the graphics guys will take the drawings from the design department and, well, sexy them up I guess. This can take several hours of processing. I don't generally get involved, so I'm not really sure exactly what we do. I'm pretty sure what we do is overkill, but that's just another bugbear of mine!

                      Oh ok, that makes way more sense. Maybe, but it normally takes longer than that to get into a cloud processing queue. So if the goal is to not deal with the hardware, maybe. If the goal is speed, not likely.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • coliverC
                        coliver @scottalanmiller
                        last edited by

                        @scottalanmiller said:

                        @thanksaj said:

                        I'm finding more and more people will load up a system with RAM but not get an equivalent processor. Having 16GB of RAM and a GPU with 2GB of RAM (assuming DDR5 but not sure what that card has) is important, but if you have an i3 or low-to-mid-range i5, that will be your bottleneck. Chances are your disk won't be your bottleneck, but there is always that as a possibility too.

                        I don't think that you'll find any functioning CAD shop running anything less than an i7. It is normal to run Xeons.

                        We have ~8 CAD machines. I was rooting for Xeons but got shot down due to price (it wasn't that much more but a $3000 machine is already a bit much). i7s did fit the bill though. We did try some i5s but I got nothing but complaints from the two users we had one them about the speed of renderings and of their program.

                        thanksajdotcomT scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • thanksajdotcomT
                          thanksajdotcom @coliver
                          last edited by

                          @coliver said:

                          @scottalanmiller said:

                          @thanksaj said:

                          I'm finding more and more people will load up a system with RAM but not get an equivalent processor. Having 16GB of RAM and a GPU with 2GB of RAM (assuming DDR5 but not sure what that card has) is important, but if you have an i3 or low-to-mid-range i5, that will be your bottleneck. Chances are your disk won't be your bottleneck, but there is always that as a possibility too.

                          I don't think that you'll find any functioning CAD shop running anything less than an i7. It is normal to run Xeons.

                          We have ~8 CAD machines. I was rooting for Xeons but got shot down due to price (it wasn't that much more but a $3000 machine is already a bit much). i7s did fit the bill though. We did try some i5s but I got nothing but complaints from the two users we had one them about the speed of renderings and of their program.

                          The performance difference between the i5 and i7 is much more remarkable than most people realize.

                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @coliver
                            last edited by

                            @coliver said:

                            We have ~8 CAD machines. I was rooting for Xeons but got shot down due to price (it wasn't that much more but a $3000 machine is already a bit much). i7s did fit the bill though. We did try some i5s but I got nothing but complaints from the two users we had one them about the speed of renderings and of their program.

                            I've worked relatively recently on CAD-like machines (doing CUDA work rather than graphical) and our standard was dual Xeons. They were pretty nice 🙂

                            coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @thanksajdotcom
                              last edited by

                              @thanksaj said:

                              The performance difference between the i5 and i7 is much more remarkable than most people realize.

                              Generation also matters a lot. Biggest hard difference between them is that the i7 always has more cache. If you are hitting the cache, that is huge. If your workload does not, it's negligable. Outside of that, i7 and i5 share the same cores. Check the clock speed, core count and HT options and likely if they match, they will roughly match outside of the cache difference.

                              thanksajdotcomT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • coliverC
                                coliver @scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                @scottalanmiller said:

                                @coliver said:

                                We have ~8 CAD machines. I was rooting for Xeons but got shot down due to price (it wasn't that much more but a $3000 machine is already a bit much). i7s did fit the bill though. We did try some i5s but I got nothing but complaints from the two users we had one them about the speed of renderings and of their program.

                                I've worked relatively recently on CAD-like machines (doing CUDA work rather than graphical) and our standard was dual Xeons. They were pretty nice 🙂

                                One of my engineers would have loved to work on a dual Xeon box (who wouldn't). He is constantly running into a bottleneck when it comes to doing some of his bigger projects. Thankfully he is really the only one that has that many parts on a single project as no one else is seeing the same slowdowns. He is also running on a 2nd gen i7 which may be part of the issue.

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                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller
                                  last edited by

                                  Generation is really a big factor.

                                  thanksajdotcomT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • thanksajdotcomT
                                    thanksajdotcom @scottalanmiller
                                    last edited by

                                    @scottalanmiller said:

                                    @thanksaj said:

                                    The performance difference between the i5 and i7 is much more remarkable than most people realize.

                                    Generation also matters a lot. Biggest hard difference between them is that the i7 always has more cache. If you are hitting the cache, that is huge. If your workload does not, it's negligable. Outside of that, i7 and i5 share the same cores. Check the clock speed, core count and HT options and likely if they match, they will roughly match outside of the cache difference.

                                    Yup, I agree.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • thanksajdotcomT
                                      thanksajdotcom @scottalanmiller
                                      last edited by

                                      @scottalanmiller said:

                                      Generation is really a big factor.

                                      Fourth gens have been performing well from what I hear. My i7 in my laptop is 3rd gen.

                                      coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • coliverC
                                        coliver @thanksajdotcom
                                        last edited by

                                        @thanksaj said:

                                        @scottalanmiller said:

                                        Generation is really a big factor.

                                        Fourth gens have been performing well from what I hear. My i7 in my laptop is 3rd gen.

                                        I've still got a first Gen i7 in my primary gaming desktop. Wish I had the money to update.

                                        thanksajdotcomT T 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • thanksajdotcomT
                                          thanksajdotcom @coliver
                                          last edited by

                                          @coliver said:

                                          @thanksaj said:

                                          @scottalanmiller said:

                                          Generation is really a big factor.

                                          Fourth gens have been performing well from what I hear. My i7 in my laptop is 3rd gen.

                                          I've still got a first Gen i7 in my primary gaming desktop. Wish I had the money to update.

                                          You'd probably need a new motherboard too, no?

                                          coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • coliverC
                                            coliver @thanksajdotcom
                                            last edited by

                                            @thanksaj said:

                                            @coliver said:

                                            @thanksaj said:

                                            @scottalanmiller said:

                                            Generation is really a big factor.

                                            Fourth gens have been performing well from what I hear. My i7 in my laptop is 3rd gen.

                                            I've still got a first Gen i7 in my primary gaming desktop. Wish I had the money to update.

                                            You'd probably need a new motherboard too, no?

                                            Probably would need to build anew. Hence the not enough money part. I do have dual 6950s (with the 6970 firmware unlocked) so I could probably still use those.

                                            thanksajdotcomT 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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