Upgrading PC - whats best for CC3+?
Gday everyone.
I have been ferreting away some spare money and am aiming to upgrade some of the components in my PC in November.
Just wondering if I could have some info on what are the best components to upgrade for an increase in CC3+ performance.
I assuming the video card still has little impact on performance but I was not planning on upgrading that anyways.
So I guess the other main players are CPU and RAM, I'm aiming to get these:
Speedy CPU
Excessive RAM
What's the maximum RAM that CC3+ can now utilise? I'm sure 32GB is total overkill for CC3+ but does extra RAM mean I could save/export at higher resolutions?
Any thoughts on the CPU?
Would be great to hear feedback from any of the CC3+ developers who would know all the inner workings of CC3+.
Thanks
Mike
I have been ferreting away some spare money and am aiming to upgrade some of the components in my PC in November.
Just wondering if I could have some info on what are the best components to upgrade for an increase in CC3+ performance.
I assuming the video card still has little impact on performance but I was not planning on upgrading that anyways.
So I guess the other main players are CPU and RAM, I'm aiming to get these:
Speedy CPU
Excessive RAM
What's the maximum RAM that CC3+ can now utilise? I'm sure 32GB is total overkill for CC3+ but does extra RAM mean I could save/export at higher resolutions?
Any thoughts on the CPU?
Would be great to hear feedback from any of the CC3+ developers who would know all the inner workings of CC3+.
Thanks
Mike
Comments
As for CPU, effects depends on that quite heavily. I don't know how well the various effects can handle multi-threading, but that particular CPU has a very nice single-core performance as well, so I believe it is a good choice, better than many of the models with more cores, as they usually have lower single-core performance.
As for the video card, CC3+ doesn't use that at all.
I ordered a new computer myself a few days ago, with the same processor, and 32GB of Ram.
I just confirmed with Joe Slayton (the current CC3+ developer) that the base engine is single-threaded, which means clock speed is important. In that regard, 6700K is actually much better than both the 6800K and 6900K, both more expensive models. Parts of the effects are multi-threaded, so I guess that for some workloads, the additional cores of those processors might help out, but due to their lower single-core performance, you are also sacrificing a lot, so I am not even sure you would see a net gain, and if so, a rather small one.
Thanks guys, this is exactly the sort of discussion I was hoping for. Good to know I'm on the right page. Monsen, if you are getting a new PC with the same processor as I intend to get, I must be doing something right
Currently I have a i5-2500K @ 3.30GHz and it must be about 5 or 6 years old now. To be fair it's still pretty snappy but looking forward to seeing what a new motherboard and new CPU can do!
Once I've saved enough money of course....
If I can think up some suitable test (time to export a map or some such thing) I'll do an old vs new time trial and post the results in November.
the problem I have is the 50 year old cataloguing system! Steam pours out of that all right, whenever I need to recall where I put something in all those sheets! LOL
Are you running your system from an SSD btw? I recommend making sure the CC3+ data directory is on an SSD, as this speeds up the loading of fills and symbols (CC3+ does use a memory cache, saving some disk lookups, but a SSD also helps. (Especially if you have a fast one)) Maybe I should do that. I got shipping confirmation of my new system today, so I should be able to get a test done in a week's time, when the new system is set up. As I mentioned above, I don't expect a revolution though, just a good general improvement.
Will be good to know how your new system runs, good luck!
I used the REDRAWTIME command on one of my city maps to have CC3+ measure the actual redraw time for the map. With my old system (i7-2600 @ 3.4Ghz), redraw time was 3.9 seconds. With the new system (i7-6700K @ 4.0Ghz) redraw time was 2.2 seconds, so definitely an improvement. I repeated the test a couple of times on each computer to make sure I got consistent results.
Bill
Bill
Have done a couple of speed tests with Tackle's Stronghold and the results were not quite as good as yours Monson, but an improvement none the less. Redraw reduced from 4.5 seconds to 3.4 seconds.
What was very encouraging though was the time it took to print to PDF. Using PDF Creator, printing at 720dpi with 2x2 tiling and 10% overlap the time to print reduced from 11m55s to 7m15s. Nearly twice as quick, but not quite.
Ok, back to reinstalling my printer drivers.
cheers
Mike