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New hardware - what has the best price/efficiency ratio today?

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  • New hardware - what has the best price/efficiency ratio today?

    Once again it's time to upgrade hardware and I'd appreciate insight from people who are more up to date with current tech.

    I think I'm gonna go with building the new rig from scratch as I usually do. I've got a graphics card I'm satisfied with so all I'm really after are the processors and preferably a motherboard that supports (and can actually make use of) at least 64 gigs of RAM. Now, the CPUs, last time I upgraded was in 2009 and back then the i7 920 was the best bang for the buck. Anyone got any suggestions as to what would be the current equivalent?

    Any help would be appreciated!
    Ville Kiuru
    www.flavors.me/vkiuru

  • #2
    Nothing. Every1 is waiting for 8-12 core i7 desktop PCS that we OC like crazy. Either wait for that or get 24 core dual xeon for £6k.
    CGI - Freelancer - Available for work

    www.dariuszmakowski.com - come and look

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    • #3
      12 core i7........my dream..........! better yet dual 12 core i7!
      Dmitry Vinnik
      Silhouette Images Inc.
      ShowReel:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxSJlvSwAhA
      https://www.linkedin.com/in/dmitry-v...-identity-name

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      • #4
        This might help: http://www.cpubenchmark.net/high_end_cpus.html
        - Geoff

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        • #5
          8-12 core i7, huh? I'm in no hurry, maybe I should wait a while then.

          Originally posted by YoyoBoy View Post
          Thanks, this is useful. I gotta say, with the i7 920 having been released in Q4 of 2008 and thus being 5 years old I'm kind of disappointed at how CPU performance has increased since.
          Ville Kiuru
          www.flavors.me/vkiuru

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          • #6
            Ok so judging by this http://www.cpubenchmark.net/high_end_cpus.html the Intel Core i7-4960X would be pretty much even with the Intel Xeon E5-1660 both in price and performance, the only difference being there's no way support for dual i7, right? So I could fit two Xeons to my rig and get a benchmark score of ~25 which would be a huge leap from the ~5 my current i7 core is getting.

            Does this make sense or am I missing something?
            Ville Kiuru
            www.flavors.me/vkiuru

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            • #7
              Originally posted by yyk View Post
              Ok so judging by this http://www.cpubenchmark.net/high_end_cpus.html the Intel Core i7-4960X would be pretty much even with the Intel Xeon E5-1660 both in price and performance, the only difference being there's no way support for dual i7, right? So I could fit two Xeons to my rig and get a benchmark score of ~25 which would be a huge leap from the ~5 my current i7 core is getting.

              Does this make sense or am I missing something?
              Yes that makes perfect sense.

              I don't know if you've found it already but there is a chart for dual CPU PCs on the same site:
              http://www.cpubenchmark.net/multi_cpu.html
              I don't know how well V-Ray scales compared to PassMark software. For example a single Intel Xeon E5-2687W gets a score of 14634 whereas a dual only manages 21217. Maybe Vlado would know?
              Dan Brew

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              • #8
                I'm holding out for 8-core desktop processors to come out before upgrading otherwise the jump from 3930k @ 4.0ghz will not be significant enough to justify the cost.
                Alex York
                Founder of Atelier York - Bespoke Architectural Visualisation
                www.atelieryork.co.uk

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                • #9
                  Keep in mind that with a little forward thinking you can OC your i7 to outperform the xeon, while the $ point is a lot lower
                  Dmitry Vinnik
                  Silhouette Images Inc.
                  ShowReel:
                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxSJlvSwAhA
                  https://www.linkedin.com/in/dmitry-v...-identity-name

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                  • #10
                    8-12 core i7s ))
                    that will be a long wait and the entry price will not be so welcoming.
                    We just bought the successor to 3930K and its about 10-15% faster, still 6 core though, but same price as 3930

                    M
                    Martin
                    http://www.pixelbox.cz

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by yyk View Post
                      Ok so judging by this http://www.cpubenchmark.net/high_end_cpus.html the Intel Core i7-4960X would be pretty much even with the Intel Xeon E5-1660 both in price and performance, the only difference being there's no way support for dual i7, right? So I could fit two Xeons to my rig and get a benchmark score of ~25 which would be a huge leap from the ~5 my current i7 core is getting.

                      Does this make sense or am I missing something?
                      Just to correct my previous, quoted post - E5-1660 is, apparently, not a multi-socket CPU. Just wanted to clear this so no-one reads this and takes wrong information out of it.
                      Ville Kiuru
                      www.flavors.me/vkiuru

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                      • #12
                        Well I'm in the same boat too, with an old i7920.

                        My build specs are going to be this:
                        i7 4930k - 6 core 3.4Ghz-3.9Ghz turbo (not sure the 4960k is worth the extra dosh for an extra 0.2Ghz!!) and you can always OC.
                        X79 (s2011) motherboard. The Gigabyte GA-X79 UP4 has 8 RAM slots so you can buy two 32GB 4 Channel sets or the UD3 is cheaper but only have 4 slots.
                        Noctua NH-D14 CPU cooler
                        650W cosair PSU
                        Fractal Design Define r4 case
                        256GB SSD
                        4GB MSI GTX 760 (I've never seen the advantage of a Quadro card or could never afford one that might even come close to a gaming card but that is a completely different thread
                        plus a few other bits n bobs.

                        This will add 12 new threads to rendering and like me you add the old i7920 onto the farm where it will still count when doing DR or BB rendering.
                        Remember a lot of MAX is still single threaded and other s/w too, so it is really only rendering where those extra cores are really coming into there own. Yes 8(16)+ core in a desktop would be nice but you will pay through the nose for them - look at thew XEONs. You could get this system build yourself for around £1k. Need more cores build another and add it to the farm. Of course the new Vray 3.0 render node pricing policy will need to be accounted for but like most smart up-graders they'll be getting a deal with the 5 or 11 node up-grade depending on current farm assets. (but that also is another lively thread)
                        Simon

                        .... . .-.. .--. .-.-.- .--. .-.. . .- ... . ... . -. -.. -.-. .... --- -.-. --- .-.. .- - .
                        I need a new signature
                        --
                        Max2017.1 | Vray 3.70.01| win11
                        ASUS Z790PLUS | i9 13900K | 64Gb RAM | Geforce GTX4070Ti

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by ior=0 View Post
                          Well I'm in the same boat too, with an old i7920.

                          My build specs are going to be this:
                          i7 4930k - 6 core 3.4Ghz-3.9Ghz turbo (not sure the 4960k is worth the extra dosh for an extra 0.2Ghz!!) and you can always OC.
                          X79 (s2011) motherboard. The Gigabyte GA-X79 UP4 has 8 RAM slots so you can buy two 32GB 4 Channel sets or the UD3 is cheaper but only have 4 slots.
                          Noctua NH-D14 CPU cooler
                          650W cosair PSU
                          Fractal Design Define r4 case
                          256GB SSD
                          4GB MSI GTX 760 (I've never seen the advantage of a Quadro card or could never afford one that might even come close to a gaming card but that is a completely different thread
                          plus a few other bits n bobs.

                          This will add 12 new threads to rendering and like me you add the old i7920 onto the farm where it will still count when doing DR or BB rendering.
                          Remember a lot of MAX is still single threaded and other s/w too, so it is really only rendering where those extra cores are really coming into there own. Yes 8(16)+ core in a desktop would be nice but you will pay through the nose for them - look at thew XEONs. You could get this system build yourself for around £1k. Need more cores build another and add it to the farm. Of course the new Vray 3.0 render node pricing policy will need to be accounted for but like most smart up-graders they'll be getting a deal with the 5 or 11 node up-grade depending on current farm assets. (but that also is another lively thread)
                          Thanks for this, sounds promising. I'll take a closer look tomorrow!
                          Ville Kiuru
                          www.flavors.me/vkiuru

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I am buying similar spec as node:
                            Intel Core i7 4930K @ 4,3Ghz
                            ASUS P9X79 Intel X79
                            4x 8GB DDR3 Kingston HyperX 1600 (32GB)
                            128GB SSD Samsung 840 PRO
                            WD Red 1TB WD10EFRX 64MB
                            Chieftec 650W Nitro2 Modular
                            Fractal R4 Black
                            DVD-RW x24 ASUS
                            Thermalright SilverArrow SB-E
                            and some cheap graphics card, I have not decided yet.
                            Best Regards

                            Tomek

                            Portfolio: http://dtown.pl/

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                            • #15
                              6 Core
                              32 gb ram
                              Asrock M4 Micro motherboard
                              120gb hdd ssd
                              550W PSU
                              then a flat case and u have great render slaver. Ill send pictures later. Its sub 900£
                              CGI - Freelancer - Available for work

                              www.dariuszmakowski.com - come and look

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