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Mixing Fast and Slow nodes for DBR?

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  • Mixing Fast and Slow nodes for DBR?

    I'm thinking about adding one or two fast Xeon nodes to two existing nodes (i7 3930). Are there any pitfalls in mixing old with new (slower with faster) in terms of how renders are processed via DBR? I'm on 2.4 now, but plan to upgrade to 3 very soon. Most of my work are large stills, but there's always the occasional animation.

    Thanks.
    David Anderson
    www.DavidAnderson.tv

    Software:
    Windows 10 Pro
    3ds Max 2024.2.1 Update
    V-Ray GPU 6 Update 2.1


    Hardware:
    Puget Systems
    TRX40 EATX
    AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3970X 32-Core 3.69GHz
    2X NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090
    128GB RAM

  • #2
    Just be careful when you are in a hurry...sometimes the slow nodes can get stuck and extend the rendertime by 5-10 minutes, or longer, waiting on those buckets to finish. We haven't upgraded to VRay 3, yet, so I don't know how well the new system works in production. In VRay 2.50.01 it can be a LONG wait on those last few buckets.
    Troy Buckley | Technical Art Director
    Midwest Studios

    Comment


    • #3
      vray 3 has the bucket splitting which really helps, but you can still get buckets stuck if there is a particularly difficult bucket near the end before the buckets split up, so you have to pay attention to which direction the render goes. (eg top to bottom or bottom to top or left to right etc)

      a 3930k i7 is likely to process the LC pass faster and start sooner, and in fact probably have a faster per bucket speed than a xeon but the xeon will have faster overall performance due to more buckets. I think you'll actually find the xeon's holding up the renders more at the ends in this case.
      WerT
      www.dvstudios.com.au

      Comment


      • #4
        Werticus, what you said in your last sentence makes me wonder now if I'd be farther ahead to get a single i7-5960 CPU over 2 x5670's? The price on used Z800's seems pretty attractive which is why I was looking at them. Hmmm what to do...
        David Anderson
        www.DavidAnderson.tv

        Software:
        Windows 10 Pro
        3ds Max 2024.2.1 Update
        V-Ray GPU 6 Update 2.1


        Hardware:
        Puget Systems
        TRX40 EATX
        AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3970X 32-Core 3.69GHz
        2X NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090
        128GB RAM

        Comment


        • #5
          Another thought: Is it generally not good to mix i7 nodes with Xeon nodes? When I can add a 2x X5670 setup to the mix for $750+/-, that's pretty darn attractive. Just worried that performance would suffer if combined with existing i7 3930's.
          David Anderson
          www.DavidAnderson.tv

          Software:
          Windows 10 Pro
          3ds Max 2024.2.1 Update
          V-Ray GPU 6 Update 2.1


          Hardware:
          Puget Systems
          TRX40 EATX
          AMD Ryzen Threadripper 3970X 32-Core 3.69GHz
          2X NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090
          128GB RAM

          Comment


          • #6
            Honestly, at the end of the day, the best thing you can do is just work the numbers out.

            Look at the many benchmarks and get a general idea of the speed of the different options. Calculate the cost and how much power they will utilize and then buy the cheapest option for you.

            We have Xeons and iCore 7 machines here as workstations depending on the work each person needs to do. Our farm is entirely Xeon due to power and space constraints. They give us the most horsepower in the smallest possible space utilizing the least amount of power. But all of that comes at a little higher price than other options.
            Troy Buckley | Technical Art Director
            Midwest Studios

            Comment

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