Who has upgraded his pc or has bought a new one recently?
-
@roland joseph said:
@unknownuser said:
GTX 980
Be aware that if you are going to assemble images for a video or animation that even a 980 will feel a little hobbled under the strain of an application like Lumion, Twin Motion, of other real time (like) rendering applications. A bargain at the moment is the geforce780 and 780ti both more robust and faster than the Titan family and cooler than the 980s. Yet you can buy a 780 for as little as 200 bucks.
Hi,
I'm about to purchase a new machine too, and I was thinking of getting the GTX 980 for Sketchup, Lumion and Max... And I just saw this post. Is it really slower than the 780 using Lumion?
On the passmark website the GTX 980 is rated at 4th place... And the lumion website recommends any card above 6000 points.
http://www.videocardbenchmark.net/high_end_gpus.htmlI know that benchmarks aren't true to reality... So I'd like to know from your experience... Is it really slower with Lumion?
-
I'm not a gamer, but when I was building my work machine a couple years ago, I had settled on mid-high level gamers Video Card as it was highly recommended. Just before purchasing, I asked a similar question to yours on a hardware forum. Someone responded that I should look into workstation graphics as "the performance was similar, but they were substantially cheaper" at the performance level and capabilities I wanted. He then posted a comparison of an inexpensive AMD FirePro, and the card I was set to buy. The performance of both were almost the same, but the Gamer card was $300 more! (He actually used a similar FirePro for his gaming.) At any rate, I Bought the AMD FirePro from Newegg (Open box) for $117. I run 2 30" monitors on my system and the old FirePro was fine. It might be worth a look. I've since upgrade to a newer FirePro.
-
@calypsoart said:
I'm not a gamer, but when I was building my work machine a couple years ago, I had settled on mid-high level gamers Video Card as it was highly recommended. Just before purchasing, I asked a similar question to yours on a hardware forum. Someone responded that I should look into workstation graphics as "the performance was similar, but they were substantially cheaper" at the performance level and capabilities I wanted. He then posted a comparison of an inexpensive AMD FirePro, and the card I was set to buy. The performance of both were almost the same, but the Gamer card was $300 more! (He actually used a similar FirePro for his gaming.) At any rate, I Bought the AMD FirePro from Newegg (Open box) for $117. I run 2 30" monitors on my system and the old FirePro was fine. It might be worth a look. I've since upgrade to a newer FirePro.
This doesn't sound right, any links to substantiate?
-
@unknownuser said:
So I'd like to know from your experience... Is it really slower with Lumion?
The 980ti is the best of the best...the 980 is second best, then the 780ti then the 780.
Once you get to Lumion with these cards the performance is very close and the difference not really discernable. I still say the straight 780 is the best overall since it can be purchased for a reasonable price. The 980s, ti and titanx are still priced too high.It should also be noted that on Windows10 Lumion can only use a maximum of 4 gig of video memory so more than 4 is redundant. I don't see a fix for this in the near future.
-
I made the most significant and noticeable change in the last 6 months or so... I bought a quality SSD. My computer is like another machine. I kid you not... I hit restart and my computer is back to the main screen and ready in 30 seconds. Photoshop opens in a snap instead of loading. SSD Baby... SSD.
-
@juju said:
This doesn't sound right, any links to substantiate?
This isn't right, actually it's completely the contrary.
The CAD series nVidia Quadro FX and AMD FirePro (formerly FireGL) are much more expensive than the comparable consumer card (GPU) simply because driver development (OpenGL) and certification with CAx systems needs to be charged.
If new, a GF GTX 960 delivers the best bang for the buck, the Asus and MSI models with twin fans are recommendable.
-
@unknownuser said:
If new, a GF GTX 960 delivers the best bang for the buck
Don't you mean 980?
The 960 is not recommended by Lumion. It falls short of the 6000 point threshold....and yes calypso seems to have things backwards altogether, and what FP model is he using anyway, he didn't say.
...in the mean time my used and battered old 180 dollar 780 is getting 20880 points on the Lumion native benchmark test.
-
@roland joseph said:
Don't you mean 980?
I'm talking of SU only, dunno Lumion.
@roland joseph said:
...in the mean time my used and battered old 180 dollar 780 is getting 20880 points on the Lumion native benchmark test.
and ~8,000 Passmark points, which is great... but not everybody (especially companies) wanna buy used hardware from unknown sources as e.g. gamers overclocking to the max (and beyond)... and fans may get worn out after years of egoshooting too
-
@unknownuser said:
I'm talking of SU only, dunno Lumion.
I was responding to a question re Lumion performance specifically
@unknownuser said:
So I'd like to know from your experience... Is it really slower with Lumion?
...and as I said used or not the 960 is not recommended.
-
Advertisement