The DMC Calculator is just a tool to help show how many samples are actually being taken of your scene depending on your settings, and since all scenes are different and can have different needs, you cant judge if you'll get a good render based solely on the numbers alone.
However, you can make some general assumptions based on the numbers it gives you, like:
The most important are the first two columns of values, the Image Sampler min and max (per pixel), and the DMC Sampler min and max (per image sample).
However, you can make some general assumptions based on the numbers it gives you, like:
- If your DMC Samples Per Image Sample are both slammed down (ie - 1max / 1min), then you know that the Image Sampler is doing all the work resolving noise, and there may be room for optimization by balancing the workload between the Image Sampler and DMC Sampler.
- If your DMC Samples Per Image Sample are both the same value (ie - 4max / 4min), then you know that there is no adaptiveness happening in your DMC Sampler, and it's behaving as if it were a fixed rate sampler... which you may or may not want happening.
- The lower you set your color/noise threshold, the more you can assume that V-Ray will be reaching the max value of both the Image Sampler and DMC sampler for each pixel.
Should we keep an eye on the min/max image samples or can we just look at the min/max of the DMC Per Pixel?
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