Results 1 to 15 of 87

Threaded View

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    Townsville, Australia
    Posts
    249
    Thanks Tommy,

    That's what I was looking for.

    Setting the ambient light levels in CA X4 ray tracer is very different to the older versions of Chief that used the POV Ray engine. Ambient of around 50% worked with the old software, the current needs to be boosted up more... however an export to POV drops all the settings and the image is much brighter.

    And why use POV Ray? .... the answer is twofold when needing to do a lot of ray tracing:
    1. POV Ray can be run on a computer that does not have Chief Architect installed - so the task can be done on any other office computers and run overnight. Offload the work to non-production computers.
    2. POV Ray supports batch processing. If you have many ray traces to do, you export them all from Chief then set them up on another computer to run as sequential jobs in a batch queue. Doing this you can set up a lot of ray traces to be done after hours.

    If you don't export to POV Ray and have to run the CA built-in ray tracer, then you have to hang around for each one to be finished.... has anyone tried opening several (say 4) different plans in Chief at the same time and tried to ray trace each one at the same time??

    If we are stuck with manually starting each plan to ray trace and waiting for it to finish, then doing each in the shortest time is very important (how many and how long are one's coffee breaks?).

    I'm confronted with a sales manager who wants all the house designs to have more decorative images for the brochures... there's about 94 existing designs and we need to add about 20 new ones. Modeling each in Chief is the first step (only need to be facade models - that's why the test plan was tossed together just to get a frontal view) then each would need ray tracing. Do the math and that will well and truly tie up a computer (and me) for months. Elapsed time for ray tracing is a very big business concern.

    Just experimenting with the ray tracing settings to get the desired results is very time consuming if it takes 20 minutes to get a low res job such as in the test plan. For A4 (US Letter) size brochures the horizontal resolution needs to be about 800 pixels with anti-aliasing turned on the smooth the edges. If I can keep that down to under 2 minutes, then I have a chance of doing the work.

    I am trying to determine if the latest AMD FX 8 core processors will ray trace quicker than the Intels. It has been easy to configure hardware (using a Shuttle bare bones) to use an i-7 2600, but the AMD has proven to be a monster... very little support for it in Australia... but still possible.

    Cheers.

 

 

Posting Permissions

  • Login or Register to post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •