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Thread: X4 Ray Tracing - Optimal CPU
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05-21-2012, 01:01 PM #1Registered User Promoted
- Join Date
- Jun 2008
- Posts
- 26
Updated Render Speeds With Different Hardware Configurations
UPDATE
We have a few computers that started with the exact same specifications so it enables me to test different options fairly easily. Unexpectedly, changing to a high-end SSD drive from a 7200rpm optical drive did not change the rendering time in the single cpu machine (quad core). I then changed from the single Xeon E5430 (2.66 GHz quad core) to dual 3.16Ghz processors. The rendering time dropped to 1:06 from the original 2:31. On the computer that got dual 2.66Ghz processors, the speed was 1:16, so I'm assuming the 10 second speed increase was the change from 2.66 to 3.16Ghz processors.
In short, going from a single quad core processor to dual quad core processors is a great bang-for-the-buck change, going to SSD, not so much (exclusively talking about renderings here)...
I now need to update my specs in my signature line :-)Thanks,
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Huckle May
Habitat Post & Beam, Inc.
www.postandbeam.com
Chief X4, Win 7-64bit OS, Two-2.67Ghz quad core Xeon Processors, 8GB RAM, nVidia Quadro FX 3700
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05-21-2012, 03:34 PM #2Architect
- Join Date
- Jun 2003
- Location
- Townsville, Australia
- Posts
- 249
Hi Huckle,
Ray tracing should have very little to do with disk I/O - everything should be in memory once the ray tracer starts. Memory size should not be an issue either - use taskmanager and note that Chief X4 ruinning the ray tracer on the test plan uses very little memory (my old system running 32 bit Chief sits under a 1MB of total system memory usage when ray tracing small plans).
The Xeon processors were developments from the Pentium (sort of solid legacy chips while the newer i-Core series were "getting up to speed").
Great that you can swap a few cpus around and greatly boost performance. The multi-cpu socket mb's were designed for such a reason.
What I can glean from the web - Xeon style processors and boards have now plateaued where the latest i-7 3770 cpus single chip systems can outperform the mutli-chip boards for mid range applications. (Web and database servers are a whole different ball game). There could be a mutli-cpu vs multi-core battle yet to come...
Heavy weight engineering design software (such as ship building) usually sit on a SQL server data base. For those apps the Xeon workstations reigned supreme.
Cheers