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  • Video card advice/opinions

    Not sure where to ask this what info I need to include. I will list my current system specs below. I do mostly Revit modeling, but also do renderings and animations using 3ds Max and Vray/Vantage. In the past I have had problems with using Vantage because my current video card is an RTX card with only 8GB of VRAM. I cant afford to spend thousands of dollars on a video card. But I need to be able to bring scenes in from 3ds Max into vantage. The number one problem I have is I dont know how to determine how much Vram I would actually need. I would hate to spend $1,000 on a 16GB card only to realize that wont be enough. So I am trying to research this to figure out what route to go. Looks like maybe I could go with a 4000 series RTX (maybe even do 2 hooked together) or a quadro. The quadro cards look like they get horribly expensive really fast. The RTX cards (even if I purchased 2 and used the SLI link) are more affordable. Im just looking for advice and opinions at this point. I would like to purchase something sooner rather than later. Thank you in advance for any insight people are willing to share. If any additional info is needed please let me know.

    Current specs:
    • Mainboard: X570 Aorus Ultra
    • CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 - 16 core
    • Memory: 64GB DDR4
    • Video Card: Nvidia Ge-Force RTX 2080-Super 8GB
    • Windows 11
    • 3ds Max 2025
    • V-Ray 6 update 2.1

  • #2
    Vantage doesn't utilize an SLI link. It is best to have two cards, one for MAX and your monitor and one for Vantage. If you optimize for GPU, a 24-GB card should be enough.
    Bobby Parker
    www.bobby-parker.com
    e-mail: info@bobby-parker.com
    phone: 2188206812

    My current hardware setup:
    • Ryzen 9 5900x CPU
    • 128gb Vengeance RGB Pro RAM
    • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090
    • ​Windows 11 Pro

    Comment


    • #3
      Thank you for your reply. Do any of the RTX cards even come with 24GB? The only ones that I saw go up to 16GB. Its possible I just didn't see any. Or would I need to go with a quadro card? I wouldn't be against going with 2 cards. I could afford 1k - 2k I just dont want to get into 5k or higher. Some of those get super spendy. But the firm I am working for now wants me to start doing some fairly high end vis for marketing etc.I stand corrected. If I bought one RTX 4090 would it be possible to run MAX and monitors on my current 2080 super (which works just fine) and vantage on the 4090 24GB?
      Last edited by terry_reeves; 20-08-2024, 02:33 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        The recommended card is the RTX 4090; I am running two of them.
        Bobby Parker
        www.bobby-parker.com
        e-mail: info@bobby-parker.com
        phone: 2188206812

        My current hardware setup:
        • Ryzen 9 5900x CPU
        • 128gb Vengeance RGB Pro RAM
        • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090
        • ​Windows 11 Pro

        Comment


        • #5
          If I bought one RTX 4090 would it be possible to run MAX and monitors on my current 2080 super (which works just fine) and vantage on the 4090 24GB?
          Yes, that would work.
          Bobby Parker
          www.bobby-parker.com
          e-mail: info@bobby-parker.com
          phone: 2188206812

          My current hardware setup:
          • Ryzen 9 5900x CPU
          • 128gb Vengeance RGB Pro RAM
          • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090
          • ​Windows 11 Pro

          Comment


          • #6
            Bobby's advice is spot on.
            You can use your current GPU for your monitors and 3Ds Max, and buy a second 24 GB card dedicated to GPU rendering. You will have plenty of VRAM to work with
            See the setup for multi-GPUs here

            Currently with one 8 GB GPU, Max will take nearly half of that to run the viewport and Windows, leaving you only 4 GB for your GPU rendering.
            If you don't want to pay for an expensive 4090, there are cheaper 16 GB cards available. No need for the expensive Quadro cards

            Best,
            Muhammed
            Muhammed Hamed
            V-Ray GPU product specialist


            chaos.com

            Comment


            • #7
              Yes, that would work
              Bobby's advice is spot on.
              You can use your current GPU for your monitors and 3Ds Max, and buy a second 24 GB card dedicated to GPU rendering. You will have plenty of VRAM to work with
              See the setup for multi-GPUs here

              Currently with one 8 GB GPU, Max will take nearly half of that to run the viewport and Windows, leaving you only 4 GB for your GPU rendering.
              If you don't want to pay for an expensive 4090, there are cheaper 16 GB cards available. No need for the expensive Quadro cards​
              Thank you to you both for your prompt response and the information, appreciate it. I ordered an RTX 4090 and it will be here Saturday. Yeah my current card doesn't cut it. I have set up GPU and also hybrid renders inside just MAX and it seems to do ok. But Vantage wouldn't even begin to bring my scenes in with my current hardware. I'm glad I don't have to go to the quadro cards. Thanks again for your insight, much appreciated.

              Comment


              • #8
                So I did get the 4090 card, it is a monster lol. I also ordered a bigger power supply and a support rod to help support this heavy thing. I am hoping to install it this weekend. My question now is Im not sure which slot would be the best for which card. There isnt a lot of room in between them either, am hoping I dont end up needing a different board. The top most slot is a PCIEX16, middle one is PCIEX8 (not sure I could get a card in middle one with out running into card that is mounted in top). Bottom one is PCIEX4. My current 8gb card is in the top one right now. I do understand some about data lanes. Seems the x8 slot and the x16 would be ideal, but I doubt that is physically possible. I also dont want to create a bottleneck.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Old card stays in the topmost slot, this is where you connect your monitors
                  New card should physically fit in the second PCIE slot, don't worry if the cards are too close. The 4090 doesn't produce a lot of heat during rendering
                  Your motherboard is on PCIE Gen 4.0 both cards will run in x8 bandwidth which is more than enough

                  Second configuration, if the 4090 doesn't physically fit in the second slot
                  4090 in first slot, not connected to monitors
                  old card is in the third slot, this bandwidth comes from the X570 chipset and should work just fine. You will not use this card in rendering anyway

                  let us know how this goes, you will need to enable Above 4G Decoding in the bios settings

                  For the power supply, you need 800 Watts or more. As long as your power supply have enough PCIE connectors for both GPUs
                  I guess you need 4x 8pins for the 4090 and 2x 8pin for the 2080 Super..

                  Best,
                  Muhammed
                  Muhammed Hamed
                  V-Ray GPU product specialist


                  chaos.com

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Thank you for your response. I was short 2 8 pin connectors on my current power supply. It was a 850 watt. I oversized it when I built this system with the thought of upgrading later, guess that plan didn't quite work out. I ordered a 1,000 watt so I should be covered plenty. It has plenty of connectors on it as well. I haven't tried to physically install the card yet. It looks like it might be close but will try this weekend. I will post a reply after this weekend and let you know how it went. Thanks again.


                    Comment


                    • #11
                      You are welcome!
                      If you have questions or run into something on the weekend you could message me on my Email. I will reply faster than the forums

                      muhammed.hamed.ext@chaos.com

                      I have one X570 board, with a very similar setup to what you have. I got it to work and I still use it until now

                      Best,
                      Muhammed
                      Muhammed Hamed
                      V-Ray GPU product specialist


                      chaos.com

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I noticed one of my cards hasn't been spinning at all. I checked, and my system only lists one card. I unplugged and plugged everything back in, and both powered up, but only one at a time. I ordered a new 4X8 RTX cord, but until then, is there anything else I can check? I don't see anything in the BIOS about video or graphics. Everything worked fine for a while, so something happened!

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                        Bobby Parker
                        www.bobby-parker.com
                        e-mail: info@bobby-parker.com
                        phone: 2188206812

                        My current hardware setup:
                        • Ryzen 9 5900x CPU
                        • 128gb Vengeance RGB Pro RAM
                        • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090
                        • ​Windows 11 Pro

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          I am narrowing it down to a cable. I have some cables ordered, so we'll see. From what I read, cables can be an issue.
                          Bobby Parker
                          www.bobby-parker.com
                          e-mail: info@bobby-parker.com
                          phone: 2188206812

                          My current hardware setup:
                          • Ryzen 9 5900x CPU
                          • 128gb Vengeance RGB Pro RAM
                          • NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090
                          • ​Windows 11 Pro

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Yeah, seems like a bad cable. Let us know how this goes!

                            Best,

                            Muhammed
                            Muhammed Hamed
                            V-Ray GPU product specialist


                            chaos.com

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Muhammed_Hamed View Post
                              Old card stays in the topmost slot, this is where you connect your monitors
                              New card should physically fit in the second PCIE slot, don't worry if the cards are too close. The 4090 doesn't produce a lot of heat during rendering
                              Your motherboard is on PCIE Gen 4.0 both cards will run in x8 bandwidth which is more than enough

                              Second configuration, if the 4090 doesn't physically fit in the second slot
                              4090 in first slot, not connected to monitors
                              old card is in the third slot, this bandwidth comes from the X570 chipset and should work just fine. You will not use this card in rendering anyway

                              let us know how this goes, you will need to enable Above 4G Decoding in the bios settings

                              For the power supply, you need 800 Watts or more. As long as your power supply have enough PCIE connectors for both GPUs
                              I guess you need 4x 8pins for the 4090 and 2x 8pin for the 2080 Super..

                              Best,
                              Muhammed
                              The installation went fairly well. Had some other issues. I think the first power supply I plugged in was somehow bad (luckily I didn't have the 4090 installed yet) I think it took out my liquid cooler pump. Long story short I ended up buying yet another power supply and a newer and maybe better liquid cooler from Corsair. Now its running good I think. I followed your advice on settings etc. One thing I am confused about though. I am still learning Vantage, although it doesn't seem nearly as complex as v-ray or max. I had it installed several days before I got the card in and I was just using the pre-installed scenes that it comes with. I originally had a DLSS quality slider on the top toolbar, and since I put this other card in it is no longer there. I did go into the Render Devices and set it to the 4090, which I assume is what I want. I know the first time I launched vantage with both cards a dialog did come up about dual graphic cards and now cant remember what it said. But I think it is all set up fine. I didn't uninstall my previous nvidia software (control panel and geforce experience) because I figured I still had the other card. I did install the graphic driver package for the new card though. Thanks for your help, was much appreciated. I'm excited to see what Vantage will do for me, since I have had a lot of issues using cpu rendering inside of max with V-ray.

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