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computer spec advice

Printed From: CAD Forum
Category: EN
Forum Name: AutoCAD
Forum Description: Discussion about AutoCAD and AutoCAD LT, viewers, DWG and DXF formats, Design Review, AutoCAD web, Drive, add-ons
URL: https://www.cadforum.cz/forum_en/forum_posts.asp?TID=4032
Printed Date: 11.Jul.2026 at 06:47


Topic: computer spec advice
Posted By: pizzle
Subject: computer spec advice
Date Posted: 19.Jul.2010 at 21:06
i am looking to upgrade my pc as im getting alot more 3D cad work in, the only problem is, i am crap when it comes to computer specs and i need to know what sort of machiene will support my needs.

i need somthing fast that will cope with detailed 3D rendering etc.

my mate is currently selling his old(ish) pc... will this be sufficient for my needs?...

pentium core 2 duo @ 2.66 ghz
8 g ram
g4 66100 gt 256 megabytes


i understand the graphics card issn't that great but if i were to upgrade that, would this be able to handle fairly detailed drawings??

any help or advice would be greatly appreciated!

Smile

 



Replies:
Posted By: Cad64
Date Posted: 19.Jul.2010 at 23:33
A good video card is very important when doing 3D work. If you don't have a good one, you will experience a lot of problems with lag when panning, orbiting and zooming and you will have issues with strange artifacts in your display. If you buy this computer, the first thing you should do is upgrade the video card.

What operating system is installed? I'm guessing it must be 64 bit if the machine has 8GB RAM, but is it XP, Vista or Win 7? If it's Vista, I would recommend loading either XP Pro or Win 7, depending on what version of Autocad you're running, because Vista is crap.

I would also recommend a quad core processor, especially if you will be doing a lot of rendering. Rendering is very processor intensive and so the more processors you have, the faster you can render.

And this computer isn't a laptop or a notebook is it? If you're going to be doing a lot of 3D work, get yourself a good desktop PC. Don't waste your time, or money, on something that's not going to be able to perform.


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Posted By: pizzle
Date Posted: 20.Jul.2010 at 12:50
thanks for the advice!
 
tbh, i think i will buy it off him as its only going to cost me Ł300 (mate rate)
 
so i'll have some money left over to upgrade a few things.
 
can you reccomend me any decent gfx & video cards etc
 
Ta


Posted By: pizzle
Date Posted: 20.Jul.2010 at 14:17
i've just found out that the video card is a Geforce 6600GT 256mb DDR3 and the processor is an intel core 2 duo 2.66mhz
 
the operating system is windows 7, 64bit.
 
Would this be sufficient do ya think?
 
 


Posted By: CADCAM
Date Posted: 20.Jul.2010 at 14:32
I would look into the Nvidia Quadro line of cards as they are specific to professional graphics and the line ranges from very inexpensive to high end.


Posted By: Breeze104
Date Posted: 20.Jul.2010 at 20:34
I agree with member_profile.asp?PF=124390&FID=2" rel="nofollow - CADCAM .  I used to have a similar card (had more memory) and it works "ok" but the NVIDIA Quadro FX 1800 is what I am using now and there is a big difference.
 
As http://www.cadforum.cz/forum_en/member_profile.asp?PF=124390&FID=2 -


Posted By: CADCAM
Date Posted: 23.Jul.2010 at 18:05
Breeze104 is correct and the reason these "gaming" video cards do not work well in CAD is due to the design of the card. Gaming video cards are designed to run code that does most of the number crunching using the CPU. Proffesional graphics cards are designed to do the work right on the card itself, not offloading so much work to be done by the CPU.



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