Hardware recommendations
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@jackson said:
Csaba, considering your laptop's current AND previous owners, could explain a lot!
Yes, indeed. I know I'll have to do the whole cleaning job, really. Once my new machine is up and running (hopefully some time early next week), I'll do it with the lappy. I just don't want to risk ending up with no computer at all as I have ongoing works (and of course, SCF ).
As for the reinstall; yeah, that will also happen. Although I think it was just about half a year or so when I last did it. However I'm afraid the lappy-lady is actually dying so I may even get it checked and if it's worth, maybe change a part or two.
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Yikes! Silly question, but have you cleaned the inside of the laptop?
A quick guide for anyone who thinks they may need to do this:
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Unplug the power cable and take out the battery.
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Unscrew all the access panels on the underside, turn the laptop back right way up, open the screen/lid to 90Β° and stand it on its side. This is to create as many "holes" in the laptop chassis as possible so dust can be blown out effectively, even back out through the keyboard.
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Using compressed air, blow a few extremely short bursts of air backwards through all the exhaust vents. This dislodges all the grunge which has accumulated on the leading edges of grilles, heatsinks and obstructions due to the constant one-directional air flow. Then do a couple of short bursts from the opposite direction (i.e. into the fan air intake) to ensure the dust you just blew backwards hasn't simply lodged somewhere else instead. Repeat this back-and-forth process a few times until you can't see any more dust coming out of either "end".
COMMON SENSE WARNING: Of course, if you're using an air compressor be very careful to limit the pressure and hold the nozzle back a few inches/cms from the actual vents as you can easily dislodge or damage components otherwise.
- If you can get access to the fan, CPU and GPU heatsinks, a large soft watercolour paint brush is great for getting in the nooks and crannies to get them shiny again (not unlike archeology!). A couple of gentle blasts of compressed air after brushing and they'll be like new.
I do this at least 3 or 4 times a year and (even though I only use it at home) a cloud of extremely fine dust is inevitably emitted from my laptop's innards every time.
A well-insulated CPU (i.e. covered in a nice fur coat of lovely fluffy dust) and blocked pipes will overheat in seconds and blowing more air through it (with an extra fan for example) could just cause more dust to accumulate, exacerbating the problem. All the more so in a smokey atmosphere which, Csaba, considering your laptop's current AND previous owners, could explain a lot!
Re: the incredibly slow start-up, it really sounds like you need to do a full OS resintall.
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@gaieus said:
Yes, indeed. I know I'll have to do the whole cleaning job, really. Once my new machine is up and running (hopefully some time early next week), I'll do it with the lappy. I just don't want to risk ending up with no computer at all as I have ongoing works (and of course, SCF ).
I would have thought that a frequently critically overheating PC would be putting your work at a much greater risk than blowing some air through it now and again.
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Without looking back over this thread, it seems to me that most people on here are talking about higher end, $1,500+ machines.
How does SU run on the very cheapest, GMA laptops available for around $300/400?
The PC I have right now is nearly three years old, bottom of the range eMachines desktop - Pentium 4 3.06Ghz, 384mb RAM, ati radeon xpress 200. For me, I really haven't had any problem with SU and the speed is perfectly acceptable for me.
How would this $378 Acer laptop from Wal Mart compare to my present one? http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=11068044 How would the 9 inch netbooks perform? http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=11319320
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My old machine I started using SU on was one with a Pentium 2.7 GHz processor, 512 Mb memory and a 128 Mb Ati Radeon X550 card. SU ran smoothly on it and I built models with more than 1.2 million poly's and 300.000 faces on it (surely by using layers often hidden and all).
This one rocks though.
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Sorry guys...I'm breaking into this discussion...but has anyone experienced the diffenrence with SU and a SSD??? Does a SSD boost the performance of SU?
Thank you!!!
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@pep75 said:
Sorry guys...I'm breaking into this discussion...but has anyone experienced the diffenrence with SU and a SSD??? Does a SSD boost the performance of SU?
Thank you!!!
I don't remember where (probably here) I picked it up, but I seem to know that OpenGL (the thing that drives the SU display) does not support multiple graphics cards, so SSD benefits only DirectX, that is mainly used by games.
Anssi
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I had an 6800GT and an 8800GT installed. worked fine.
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@anssi said:
@pep75 said:
Sorry guys...I'm breaking into this discussion...but has anyone experienced the diffenrence with SU and a SSD??? Does a SSD boost the performance of SU?
Thank you!!!
I don't remember where (probably here) I picked it up, but I seem to know that OpenGL (the thing that drives the SU display) does not support multiple graphics cards, so SSD benefits only DirectX, that is mainly used by games.
Anssi
Hmmm... not exactly that - the guy is probably talking about hard drives and not display cards (solid state drives). Also, OpenGL can run too, over multiple cards - using a Fx3800 or better card. Application dependent, however.
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Don't think it'd make any difference with SU whatsoever other than hard drive dependant tasks like opening files, autosaving, importing textures, etc. In terms of modelling and orbiting, hard drive speed is irrelevant AFAIK.
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Hi Tommy great idea by the way, i've ben scanning through and had a look at the database as im looking to get a new computer at work as i'm cutrrently running sketchup on 2 computers here, one is on vista and the other is xp and both are becoming very sluggish. The reason is the models i'm creating are huge, ranging from 40 to 70 mb each once all the components are pieced together. The models are of new housing sites and the individual houses etc created on their own run perfectly, with only the odd glich when autosaving sometimes. As soon as i piece everything together onto a contoured layout it all slows up, causing problems.
Just wondered if there are any machines that stand out when using very large models as you can't tell on the database what sort of work people are using them for, and the machines im currently using work excellent with smaller models.
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Have you updated to sketchup 7.1? if not its by far the easiest you could do to improve the performance with your models. (sorry that sounds so much like sales banter, but its true.)
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I am currently running it on my other machine yes and i found it did improve it but again with the complete model its soo slow. The only way i get around it is by turning the majority of the layers off but obviously there are some points where i need to view the model with everything turned on
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Hello, I'm new on sketchucation, and I 'd like to have some advice. I'm just done with architecture studies and owner of a new macbook pro unibody 15" 2.8Ghz - 4gb Ram - 512Mo dedicated. Sketchup pro 7 runs perfectly my diploma files (4mb, without any google warehouse components and shadows activated) with the better battery life configuration, so i don't have to switch. I haven't worked with sketchup for more than 20 minutes (just for a test) with this config. I was before running xp with nvidia 7600gt (256) and thas was terribly slow...
I have just noticed a problem with zooming in edges, that appeared with my old config, and appears with both graphic cards config on the macbook too.
The fact is that for other reasons, i asked apple a return, and i'm not sure i'll order the same config, because the 9400 integrated card seems to be enough to me. I'm planning using vectorworks(2D), cinema4D+V-ray, photoshop, and no games. The point is that if i choose the basic apple config, my processor will be only 2.53 and less disk space (250 to 500).
I'd like to hear what u think about that. Is there some mac users who can confirm or not what i'm saying. It's not really a money problem, but if i won't use this card, it's a bit stupid to buy it. Regards
PS : i d like to make some test with big scenes if u can send me some...
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If those are the programs you're running I would hardly factor SketchUp into your decision. Your main hogs will probably be Photoshop and VRay for RAM and Vray will also chew through whatever CPU you give it. You may or may not notice a difference in sketchup or C4D between those two specs, but you'll definately notice a difference in your rendering time with Vray.
-Brodie
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Thank u Brodie for advices.
@unknownuser said:
I would hardly factor SketchUp into your decision
Look at my post http://forums.sketchucation.com/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=20076&p=189659#p189659 and you'll understand that, it's hard to notice a difference with sketchup.
Sure v-ray render will be faster, but once u notice the similar graphic performance with both specs (for cad i mean, i'm not a gamer), don't u think that the price difference between those 2 specs is a bit exagerate for faster renders... They both have 4gb Ram, one is 1599β¬, the other 2099(French prices).
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Yeah, I would have expected a bit more of a difference than that but not much. With SU my understanding is the CPU is pretty much in control of the geometry while the graphics card handles the materials and shadows. That doesn't leave a whole lot for a high end card to do. If you test it out with a large model with lots of big materials and shadows on you might see the gap widen a bit but I'm not sure offhand what the difference is between the to graphics cards.
As far as the price difference, yeah it sounds like a pretty big jump for .3 ghz of RAM. If you've got a desktop at home that you can do rendering on I'd stick to the cheaper one. But if this is your only machine maybe it's worth it to you to spend the extra money. Only thing I can say is that if you're going to spend extra money on anything with a rendering computer it should be the CPU. Adding RAM usually isn't too difficult and even upgrading graphics cards isn't so bad but upgrading CPU's is pretty tricky.
-Brodie
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Hi to ALL,
I want to upgrade my desktop PC in the near future, especially for the use of SketchUp and high poly counts for example and for rendering purposes and for photo editing.
After some research on the Internet and in the forum, I would prefer the Intel i7 860 processor instead an i7 920, 8GB Memory (DDR3), and Windows 7 64-bit.
The graphics card I'm not sure what is the best choice for these purposes. I prefer a Nvidia graphics adapter, because I rode with them always good.
I do not know what's really important at the graphics card for the above mentioned purposes. And the many I've read on the internet has confused me even more. And the product range confused me too.
And I can't really see, what is the most important factor that influences SU's performance and the performance of render machines.
For Which type would you advise me?
Nvidia Quadro FX 580 (G96) 512MB GDDR3 / 32 CUDA Processing Cores / 2 Display Ports und 1 Dual-Link DVI-I Output
Entry-Level Productivity CAD / DCCNvidia Quadro FX 380 (G96)Entry-Level 256MB GDDR3 / 16 CUDA Processing Cores / 2 Dual-Link DVI-I Outputs
200 Series
GeForce GTX 295
GeForce GTX 285
GeForce GTX 280
GeForce GTX 275
GeForce GTX 2609 Series
GeForce 9800 GX2
GeForce 9800 GTX+
GeForce 9800 GTX
GeForce 9800 GT
GeForce 9600 GT
GeForce 9600 GSO
GeForce 9500 GT
GeForce 9400 GTAny help and advices would be very appreciated.
Karlheinz
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Unfortunately graphics cards aren't used to their full potential very often. In SU your graphics card will basically be used for your shadows and textures while geometry will be taken care of by 1 core of your processor. In most rendering engines out there your graphics card does nothing for your actual rendering times. It only helps if you have a "studio" in your rendering program that will let you rotate the model around, but once you click Render your graphics card isn't really used. So in that vein, graphics cards haven't been very crucial. You could get a pretty decent card and be fine.
HOWEVER, the next wave in rendering engines is to use the graphics card power rather than or in addition to your processor power which allows for nearly real time rendering. So if you want to think ahead towards the future you may want to buy the best card you can. Before you decide you may want to check out some of the rendering engines out there that do gpu rendering like v-ray rt. they may have some good suggestions on what they like to see in a graphics card.
-brodie
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Charly,
The QuadroFX cards you mention would probably work OK, but their performance is not too stellar. For a QuadroFX card, I would choose one with a 4-digit model number (and the 512 Mb graphics memory is the minimum recommended by Google, although SU seems to work OK with much less - the laptop I am writing this with has only 64 Mb). If you cannot afford that, go with a GeForce.
Anssi
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