ChrAyl
Active member
Hello again all,
Thanks firstly to those that helped me with my original build, really did appreciate your help: @Stephen M @Daniel Super @keithbeaks @SpyderTracks
Disclaimer: I do wonder, is it worth holding off until Zen 3, just in case? Also if holding off until PCIe4, in case that's helpful at all?
Things have taken a funny turn, I've recently been using some different rendering software, and this has flipped my original plan on its head My intention was to get a lot of cores such as a 3850X, but the new S/W prefers GPU rendering. I've been using it on my P2000 and GTX 1070 and it works OK on those (slightly better as expected on the 1070).
So my new plan is looking less at loads of cores and perhaps a reasonable amount of them instead- although I'll be multi tasking to an extent, I will largely be using single threaded apps that like high frequency. I've had 4 and 6 core machines, and really want to shift up more than 8 cores.
I fully appreciate the comments made about Intel being a bit dead in the water at the moment, but wondered about this in case they've improved:
So far as inputs:
Monitors: 3 x 27in (not 4K, I've been told CAD gets squirrely)
USB: 1 x Mouse, 1 x Keyboard, 1 x Spacemouse, 1 x Dymo Label Printer, 1 x Phone charge, 1 x USB extension port (6)
I'd like to keep to a budget of £1700-1800 this time round if at all possible. I was going to sell my GTX 1070, perhaps it'll go for £100 or so.
Thanks in advance, yet again!
Chris
Thanks firstly to those that helped me with my original build, really did appreciate your help: @Stephen M @Daniel Super @keithbeaks @SpyderTracks
Disclaimer: I do wonder, is it worth holding off until Zen 3, just in case? Also if holding off until PCIe4, in case that's helpful at all?
Things have taken a funny turn, I've recently been using some different rendering software, and this has flipped my original plan on its head My intention was to get a lot of cores such as a 3850X, but the new S/W prefers GPU rendering. I've been using it on my P2000 and GTX 1070 and it works OK on those (slightly better as expected on the 1070).
So my new plan is looking less at loads of cores and perhaps a reasonable amount of them instead- although I'll be multi tasking to an extent, I will largely be using single threaded apps that like high frequency. I've had 4 and 6 core machines, and really want to shift up more than 8 cores.
I fully appreciate the comments made about Intel being a bit dead in the water at the moment, but wondered about this in case they've improved:
- CPU: i9-10900 (no letters at the end)
- GPU: RTX 3070/3080
- RAM: 32GB (non-ECC)
So far as inputs:
Monitors: 3 x 27in (not 4K, I've been told CAD gets squirrely)
USB: 1 x Mouse, 1 x Keyboard, 1 x Spacemouse, 1 x Dymo Label Printer, 1 x Phone charge, 1 x USB extension port (6)
I'd like to keep to a budget of £1700-1800 this time round if at all possible. I was going to sell my GTX 1070, perhaps it'll go for £100 or so.
Thanks in advance, yet again!
Chris