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Will dual CPU's speed up my Phoenix FD simulations?

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  • Will dual CPU's speed up my Phoenix FD simulations?

    Title says it all, i'm thinking of upgrading from a single i7-7820X 3.60GHz to a dual Intel Xeon Silver 12 core 2.2 GHz each.

    Will i see significant simulation speed increase with dual processors, or will Phoenix FD only recognize and utilize 1 of them?

  • #2
    Use 3960x or 3970x
    I just can't seem to trust myself
    So what chance does that leave, for anyone else?
    ---------------------------------------------------------
    CG Artist

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    • #3
      What Paul said; a single CPU is always better for simulations.

      Best regards,
      Vlado
      I only act like I know everything, Rogers.

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      • #4
        Thanks for the response, could someone explain why that is? is it a limitation of the software or is this an overall computing problem?

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        • #5
          They have to share data between sockets. Slower, than not doing this. Simple

          My cpu is 3960x - really fast. Incredibly.
          Last edited by Paul Oblomov; 06-02-2020, 02:52 AM.
          I just can't seem to trust myself
          So what chance does that leave, for anyone else?
          ---------------------------------------------------------
          CG Artist

          Comment


          • #6
            Dropping from 3.6 to 2.2 per core will probably slow your simulations down too.
            it's a limitation of fluid simulation - everything depends on everything else at all times.

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            • #7
              yep and avoid the 32 core threadrippers as well

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              • #8
                Um... why?
                Aleksandar Mitov
                www.renarvisuals.com
                office@renarvisuals.com

                3ds Max 2023.2.2 + Vray 7 Hotfix 1
                AMD Ryzen 9 9950X 16-core
                96GB DDR5
                GeForce RTX 3090 24GB + GPU Driver 566.14

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                • #9
                  super slow...will get totally outpaced by something with less cores and higher clock speed. think phoenix treats them as 2 cpus

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by squintnic View Post
                    super slow...will get totally outpaced by something with less cores and higher clock speed.
                    Is this conclusion based on personal experience and tests with the new Threadrippers or just a guess?

                    Originally posted by squintnic View Post
                    think phoenix treats them as 2 cpus
                    This is not true. 3970x and 3960x are treated as one CPU by Windows. I have 3970x and Windows sees it as one CPU and a single NUMA node. I agree that if you do only simulations and nothing else, then a cheap low-core count CPU is more appropriate, but if you also do rendering, IMHO there's no reason not to get a 3960x or a 3970x as they don't have the drawbacks of the old Threadrippers (multiple NUMA nodes, memory access slowdowns with Windows, lower clock speed etc.). 3970x and 3960x also boost to 4.50 Ghz in single core workloads which might sounds a bit low compared to some Intel CPUs, but don't forget that the Zen 2 architecture has 9-10% higher IPC than Intel's latest CPUs so a frequency of 4.50 Ghz on a Ryzen 3000 processors is equivalent to ~4.90 Ghz on Intel.
                    Last edited by Alex_M; 17-02-2020, 08:22 AM.
                    Aleksandar Mitov
                    www.renarvisuals.com
                    office@renarvisuals.com

                    3ds Max 2023.2.2 + Vray 7 Hotfix 1
                    AMD Ryzen 9 9950X 16-core
                    96GB DDR5
                    GeForce RTX 3090 24GB + GPU Driver 566.14

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                    • #11
                      my threadripper 2990wx 32 core is slower than my older i7 3970k in phoenix - do some tests and find out the hard way. might be different with the newer AMDs

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                      • #12
                        Well, this explains it. 2990wx is based on the older Zen 1 architecture that had issues with RAM access under Windows due to the multiple NUMA nodes and because not all chips were directly connected to the memory controller. The new 3000 series Threadrippers have nothing in common with the old ones. They are made on a completely new architecture called Zen 2 which is free of all shortcomings of the previous Threadrippers - they are much faster in single core workloads, much snappier in day to day use, and maybe most importantly - they are not split into multiple NUMA nodes and don't have memory latency slowdowns because all chiplets are connected directly to the memory controller.
                        Last edited by Alex_M; 18-02-2020, 07:13 AM.
                        Aleksandar Mitov
                        www.renarvisuals.com
                        office@renarvisuals.com

                        3ds Max 2023.2.2 + Vray 7 Hotfix 1
                        AMD Ryzen 9 9950X 16-core
                        96GB DDR5
                        GeForce RTX 3090 24GB + GPU Driver 566.14

                        Comment

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