(I don't think I can post in the RT forum (we are not an RT owner...yet!) so bare with me)
Its been a while since I've looked at building a workstation, but I am hoping, at some point soon, to start building a test-rig for Vray RT GPU. I have a few, somewhat basic, questions:-
1) How many Graphics cards can you put into a Windows 7 x64-based machine? I always thought 2 was the limit.
2) I've never built a machine with more than 1 card. With a multi card setup, which one do I actually connect my monitors (2 of them) to?
3) Our plan is to have workstations with fast GPU rendering qualities, and leave our render farm as CPU-based rendering for final renders. RT is essentially for 'test rendering', whereas final renders (vrimg files), to get all the render elements and alpha channels, need to be rendered 'traditionally'. Am I right in my thinking?
4) Our workstations, though powerful when we bought them, are becoming a bit tired. They have quad-core intel CPUs, 8GB Ram and ATI v7350 graphics cards. I now realise ATI cards aren't supported by RT GPU. Would a 'quick fix' to bring them up to speed be to replace the graphics cards with the best gaming cards we can get? The main boards are D975XBX2 and this is what the spec says:-
"Three PCI-Express x16 slots for CrossFire (top two running either x16 and x1, or x8 and x8, and third slot locked to x4".
What, therefore, would be the best setup for GPU based rendering? Does this suggest I can put 3 cards in there?
<EDIT: A quick 'google' suggests I cannot run multiple Nvidia based cards in this motherboard. Typical. So this would mean I either rip out the motherboard as well, or cross my fingers that RT GPU will be supported with ATI soon>
Its been a while since I've looked at building a workstation, but I am hoping, at some point soon, to start building a test-rig for Vray RT GPU. I have a few, somewhat basic, questions:-
1) How many Graphics cards can you put into a Windows 7 x64-based machine? I always thought 2 was the limit.
2) I've never built a machine with more than 1 card. With a multi card setup, which one do I actually connect my monitors (2 of them) to?
3) Our plan is to have workstations with fast GPU rendering qualities, and leave our render farm as CPU-based rendering for final renders. RT is essentially for 'test rendering', whereas final renders (vrimg files), to get all the render elements and alpha channels, need to be rendered 'traditionally'. Am I right in my thinking?
4) Our workstations, though powerful when we bought them, are becoming a bit tired. They have quad-core intel CPUs, 8GB Ram and ATI v7350 graphics cards. I now realise ATI cards aren't supported by RT GPU. Would a 'quick fix' to bring them up to speed be to replace the graphics cards with the best gaming cards we can get? The main boards are D975XBX2 and this is what the spec says:-
"Three PCI-Express x16 slots for CrossFire (top two running either x16 and x1, or x8 and x8, and third slot locked to x4".
What, therefore, would be the best setup for GPU based rendering? Does this suggest I can put 3 cards in there?
<EDIT: A quick 'google' suggests I cannot run multiple Nvidia based cards in this motherboard. Typical. So this would mean I either rip out the motherboard as well, or cross my fingers that RT GPU will be supported with ATI soon>
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