Professional PC use of AutoCAD
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Sometimes at my job I have taken advantage of doing tests on hard drives and the difference between one of 60/80Gb and a Seagate 7200.11 like mine is abysmal, with mine performing twice as fast. It seems that the 7200.14 are the best and are at least 50% faster than mine.
As for the motherboard, I don't know if it has dual channel, but we can look into it if you post the'service tag' of the computer, which, when put on the Dell page, identifies exactly which computer it is.
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so we left it for tuesday, I'm busy dismantling the GSM :eoh:
regards and thanks -
An i7 will be fine for AutoCAD, put a lot of memory and a decent graphics card and you're ready
Of course, SATA3 disks and a solid disk for the operating system and you have more than enough
Intel Core i7-3820 3.60Ghz - 250 euros
Asrock X79 Extreme4 - 185 euros
Kingston HyperX Beast DDR3 1600 PC3-12800 16GB 2X8GB CL9 - 120 euros
Crucial M4 128GB SSD SATA3 or a similar one for the operating system - 90 euros
Seagate Barracuda 7200.14 2TB SATA3 64MB - 80 euros
If the graphics card you have is sufficient, that's fine, if not, a nVIDIA Quadro 600 1GB GDDR3 card is worth 190 euros
If you don't render, a Radeon 7750 with 2Gb DDR3 will be fine - approx. 85 euros
A power supply like the CORSAIR TX650W and a decent case
Total between 900 and 1000 euros
Regards -
Hello.
I, from my ignorance, also think that with an I7/I5 + the quadronvidia it is enough, that is, with quality disks or a RAID0, but the computer scientist says that the Xeon performs better
Regards -
an i5 is fine but it's weak for autocad, an i7 from the 2011 socket is better, for raw power
because the micro is the one that does 99% of the work in autocad and if you render you need
good graphics and the more memory the graphics have the betterif you have to lower the price then something similar in the 1155 socket
if not an AMD FX Series FX-8350 4.0Ghz 8X is a very good optionbut if it's for professional and for work the i7 from the 2011 socket is the best option
because it saves you a lot of timeregards
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Correct me if I'm wrong but the low-end Xeon range in terms of features are identical to their "i" siblings, they are just supposed to be mounted on work stations/servers with registered memory etc. to provide reliability but with the same features and performance. And beware because if they mount a cheap old Xeon on you it will perform worse, that's when you look for the model on the wiki and see what generation it is, but by price it usually doesn't pay off for a CAD PC. Dedicated graphics cards for CAD do improve performance but it's useful to look at comparisons because they are not cheap and do not always pay off with much improvement and it varies depending on the program, version, etc. And I would not recommend RAID0 more than for the OS in any case but it has more risk of data loss, and even so today I would prefer an SSD. Using the 2011 platform more than anything else because of the width in RAM with quad-channel, of the rest it will not provide any extra performance. -
And while we're on the subject, a crossfire or SLI of previous generation graphics would probably provide some raw performance for CAD if dedicated graphics were ruled out. It's an idea I've always had about these matters of working with CAD, design, etc.
Best regards
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And while we're on the subject, a crossfire or SLI of previous generation graphics would probably provide some raw performance for CAD if dedicated graphics were ruled out. It's an idea I've always had regarding these work issues with CAD, design, etc.
Regards
that would only be useful for rendering and I don't know if AutoCAD works with SLi or CROSSFIRE
regards
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I swear that not so long ago we talked about this type of graphics and I'm not sure if some models of graphics for CAD and 3D were compared, I think ATI in particular that rendered more or less, but I wouldn't put an SLI to spend money on something of my own and if not then with one that kicks... I mean. If you look you'll see that there are several topics in the forum that will probably sound familiar to you, but be careful not to travel to the past, if you find yourself don't interact and go to create a parallel future eh Franziskaner ;D
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damn, what a week :llorar:
well the machine is this:
http://www1.la.dell.com/la/es/corp/Workstations/precn_t7400/pd.aspx?refid=precn_t7400&s=corp
as a novelty, I must say that the "IT guy" has changed the hard drive for a more current one and the performance has improved quite a bit. It would probably improve more if the "IT guy" did a CLEAN installation instead of making a backup :facepalm: and keeping the OS on one drive and AutoCAD on another :mad:.
I'll tell my colleague to run a couple of tests to see the capabilities of the "tractor"
greetings and thanks to everyone
P.D about SLI ….. I don't think AutoCAD or Master Cam will take advantage of it, maybe 3DMax will, but in my job and in many others, that's a damned program ;D
P.D 2
I'm really glad to see that you've come back with more energy than ever Bm4n ;D -
Quadro graphics or Ati Crossfire do not improve performance much when working in 2D, it does not justify the price of a Quadro, a decent domestic graphics card is preferable.
Where it is noticeable is when working in 3D, when moving models or working with models with all their textures.Graphics cards also do not help when calculating final renders. 3Ds Max or similar programs use the processor to calculate images, in fact, several computers on a network are usually used for the calculations of a large animation or image.
Autodesk - Certified Hardware - Find Recommended Hardware
autodesk says which driver it has tested with each graphics card and which it recommends with each program and version.