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    Making SketchUp use More RAM ?

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    • Dave RD Offline
      Dave R
      last edited by

      Is your model larger than the available RAM? If not, SketchUp will use what it needs. Did you miss the part about improving your CPU and GPU. More important than having 8 Gb of RAM is the graphics card. Did you update that while you were increasing the RAM? If your GPU isn't up to the task, it doesn't matter how much RAM you have.

      It's kind of like enlarging your shed to hold the big yacht you're building from scratch but not making the door big enough to get it out once you do have it built.

      Etaoin Shrdlu

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      • john2J Offline
        john2
        last edited by

        @dave r said:

        Is your model larger than the available RAM? If not, SketchUp will use what it needs. Did you miss the part about improving your CPU and GPU. More important than having 8 Gb of RAM is the graphics card. Did you update that while you were increasing the RAM? If your GPU isn't up to the task, it doesn't matter how much RAM you have.

        No my model is not larger than the available RAM. I am using 2GB graphics card as listed in my signature. I did not update my graphics card while upgrading my RAM. It is the same.

        Sketchup Make 2017 (64-bit), Vray 4.0 , Windows 10 – 64 bit, corei7-8750H, 16GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050Ti 4GB

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        • JQLJ Offline
          JQL
          last edited by

          Then you won't have faster sketchup. Having bigger RAM will just make you able to model bigger stuff.

          This will, in fact, make sketchup slower... As models grow they are slower to work with!

          www.casca.pt
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          • S Offline
            slbaumgartner
            last edited by

            We went through endless debates and misinformation about this back before SketchUp went to 64-bit, with many people arguing (erroneously) that this would affect performance. Now, in a post expansion reality check, it should be clear to everyone that increasing RAM just increases the size of the model you can work without encountering virtual memory swapping. It does nothing, per se, to improve the performance of SketchUp.

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            • J Offline
              jtri
              last edited by

              My IT guy is telling me that a solid state drive will improve the performance of my computer. Will I notice an improvement in SketchUp?

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              • JQLJ Offline
                JQL
                last edited by

                @jtri said:

                My IT guy is telling me that a solid state drive will improve the performance of my computer. Will I notice an improvement in SketchUp?

                Definetelly. Saving is a blink and autosave too.

                However if you go to "model info > file > redefine thumbnail on save" and turn it off, you'll see better improvement than a SSD.

                Before, autosaves were the main reason for breaking my concentration.

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                • john2J Offline
                  john2
                  last edited by

                  Thanks everyone for replying 😄

                  @jql said:

                  @jtri said:

                  My IT guy is telling me that a solid state drive will improve the performance of my computer. Will I notice an improvement in SketchUp?

                  Definetelly. Saving is a blink and autosave too.

                  However if you go to "model info > file > redefine thumbnail on save" and turn it off, you'll see better improvement than a SSD.

                  Before, autosaves were the main reason for breaking my concentration.

                  That's one hell of a trick I didn't know. Thanks a lot for compensating my feelings of absence of SSD 👍 👍

                  Sketchup Make 2017 (64-bit), Vray 4.0 , Windows 10 – 64 bit, corei7-8750H, 16GB RAM, Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050Ti 4GB

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                  • G Offline
                    gnome_mo
                    last edited by

                    I'm aware that this is old topic, but I'll try to explain my problems.
                    Recently I've bought new computer, and thought that it will really affect the size that I can work with in sketchup.
                    However...
                    The model I've been working on reached 500+Mb, and it got reaaaaly slow to work with. later I turned everything to proxys and managed to get everything done on time.
                    But, I regularly see models of interiors 1Gb+ large, and I'm wonderingf how in the world it's done?
                    So, I checked performance in task manager, and noticed that my model is using only 9Gb of RAM (out of 32 available). That seems somewhat wrong to me - why is it getting slower if there's enough resources?
                    My specs are: AMD Threadripper 1950x (16 cores), 32 Gb RAM and Nvidia GTX 1080Ti graphis card.

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                    • S Offline
                      slbaumgartner
                      last edited by

                      It gets slower because the burden of maintaining the database of geometry and coordinating it between the CPU and GPU gets heavier when the model is very large - even if the entire model will fit in RAM memory.

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                      • G Offline
                        Garry K
                        last edited by

                        Here is something that can drastically affect model size.

                        I used CabMaker 3 extension and inserted 14 cabinets into the model. Most of the parts are components. I then saved the file as kitchen_1 size 6,369 K.
                        I then opened the Component Inspector and chose In Model. It took just under 3 minutes to display all the components in the inspector. For these 14 cabinets there are a total of 745 entries in the inspector. I then save the file as kitchen_2 size 18,512 K. There were 745 thumbnails - 1 for each component.
                        I then chose Components instead of In Model and closed the Inspector window.
                        I then opened the first file kitchen_1. In this case I left the Component Inspector closed. I created a simple cube and turned it into a component. After about 3 minutes I regained control. I then saved the file as kitchen_3. It is 18,518 K. I opened the component Inspector, chose in Model and within a second all 746 thumbnails appear.
                        It appears that Sketchup doesn't update the images when creating components within a script. Instead it does so after creating a component using the UI or when displaying the components in model.

                        kitchen as components.png

                        I then installed a new version of CabMaker 3 which uses groups instead of components. I opened kitchen_2, selected all cabinets and ran the editor after which I purged. Then I opened the Component Inspector in Model which displayed a single component - the handle.
                        I then saved the file as kitchen_4 size 3,521 K. Sketchup is also more responsive and there are no apparent wait times when creating a component using the UI.

                        I would recommend to anyone working on very large projects to at least consider using groups - especially with nested containers that contain groups or components and no geometry. Of course there are situations where components make sense. Especially with geometry having high poly counts and where you want to make a change and have all copies change.
                        Too bad we don't have a way to tell Sketchup not to create an entry for components in the component inspector on a component basis.

                        kitchen as groups.png

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