I'm a new, small one-person shop, doing all of my renders on a single workstation via CPU (6 core, 12 thread i7-6800K). GTX 1060 3GB video card. My focus is primarily on interior stills.
I've been drooling over the new Ryzen CPU offering from AMD. But am also a bit conflicted with the positive trend I'm seeing with V-Ray RT/GPU for production rendering. And now with the GTX 1080 Ti, I find myself wondering which direction would be a better investment.
Option A: Build a new Ryzen system and purchase a render node license. Pros: Don't have to learn a new workflow. Setting up Distributed Rendering seems fairly straightforward. Serves as a back-up workstation in case of primary workstation failure. Cons: More expensive than option B.
Option B: Purchase a GTX 1080 Ti and add it to my existing system. Pros: Less expensive. Cons: Learn & switch to a GPU workflow (no idea what's involved).
The main priority for me is getting render times to a minimum. So even if Option A is more expensive, but results in appreciably lower render times, I'm happy to go that way.
An interesting twist might be... that TWO 1080 Ti's might still be less expensive than Option A, and I wonder what kind of render times I might see then? My motherboard has two GPU slots, I could remove the 1060 and replace with two 1080 Ti's.
I've been drooling over the new Ryzen CPU offering from AMD. But am also a bit conflicted with the positive trend I'm seeing with V-Ray RT/GPU for production rendering. And now with the GTX 1080 Ti, I find myself wondering which direction would be a better investment.
Option A: Build a new Ryzen system and purchase a render node license. Pros: Don't have to learn a new workflow. Setting up Distributed Rendering seems fairly straightforward. Serves as a back-up workstation in case of primary workstation failure. Cons: More expensive than option B.
Option B: Purchase a GTX 1080 Ti and add it to my existing system. Pros: Less expensive. Cons: Learn & switch to a GPU workflow (no idea what's involved).
The main priority for me is getting render times to a minimum. So even if Option A is more expensive, but results in appreciably lower render times, I'm happy to go that way.
An interesting twist might be... that TWO 1080 Ti's might still be less expensive than Option A, and I wonder what kind of render times I might see then? My motherboard has two GPU slots, I could remove the 1060 and replace with two 1080 Ti's.
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