What is the Best Processor for SolidWorks AMD 64fx, Xeon, P4?

Discussion in 'SolidWorks' started by Ben, Feb 15, 2005.

  1. Ben

    Ben Guest

    I want to build a new machine. Bang for the Buck and dependablity.
    What is the best processor, Video, HD SATA or SCSI and how much memory.
     
    Ben, Feb 15, 2005
    #1
  2. Ben

    P. Guest

  3. Ben

    Wry&Dry Guest

    I fairly recently did a ton of research (4 months ago) and came up with the
    following specs for a SolidWorks PC

    Bear in mind that this was 4 months ago, things change quickly, and that not
    all would agree with my decisions, anyhow I am very happy with the results.
    I did a lot of my research on Toms Hardware and AnandTech and some other
    sites aligned to overclocking and modding etc...

    Motherboard

    MSI K8N NEO2 Platinum N-Vidia NForce3 chipset.



    Processor

    AMD Athlon 64 3500+ Socket 939 Newcastle.



    RAM

    Corsair Twin-X PC3200 400DDR 2048mb (2x 1GB).



    Primary Hard Drive

    Western Digital Raptor 74GB SATA 10,000 rpm 8mb cache in raid stripe
    0.(single disk in raid array?? reccomended set up on MSI bulletin board)



    Secondary Hard Drive

    Western Digital Caviar 40GB EIDE 7200 rpm ATA100 8mb cache.



    External Hard Drive

    Seagate Barracuda 120GB EIDE 7200 rpm ATA100 8mb cache mounted in coolmax
    USB 2.0 external 3.5in enclosure.



    Video Card

    PNY / NVidia Quadro4 900XGL 128mb DDR



    DVD Drive

    Pioneer DVR-108 DVD + - RW 16x4x16 / Dual Layer +R 4x / CDRW 32x24x40 IDE.



    CDROM

    BENQ 56x IDE



    Case

    Antec Sonata quiet case



    Floppy Drive

    Generic 3 ΒΌ " Floppy Drive



    Wireless LAN

    LinkSys Wireless-G PCI Adapter WMP54G



    Monitor

    Viewsonic P95f 19" pure flat professional series



    Keyboard

    Logitech Elite Keyboard



    Mouse

    Logitech MX500 Performance optical mouse



    I can thoroughly reccomend the case, seems like a trivial item when building
    a system but this case together with an AMD processor with "cool and quiet
    technology" really makes a difference. Due to budget I bought the video card
    on ebay and i did some research on Nvidia cards and SW before deciding on
    the 900xgl (a 4xAGP card), this card actually outperforms the fx500 and the
    980xgl which are both 8x AGP cards.



    anyhow hope this helps good luck and post what you end up with.
     
    Wry&Dry, Feb 18, 2005
    #3
  4. Ben

    Ben Guest

    What is your benchmarks results...
    Should I spring for a Dual Intel or AMD or Just Single....I find SW is
    slowest for me in the drawing mode...it drives me nuts.

    I would pay for more speed...
    If I really got it....
     
    Ben, Feb 20, 2005
    #4
  5. Ben

    P. Guest

    Ship In A Bottle
    As I recall when first built I was down around 25 or 26 seconds and now
    I can get 28 with other things running. If I set the graphics real low
    I can get 18 seconds. For that kind of performance you would have to
    forgo 1600x1200 and work in 1024/768 with shaded quality set all the
    way down.

    Duals don't buy you anything unless you are running PhotoWorks. Go AMD
    and the Opteron or FX55.
     
    P., Feb 20, 2005
    #5
  6. Ben

    Paul Guest

    I recently bought a fully loaded Sun W2100Z dual opteron system for less
    than many single prc FX55 systems. It is a real nice machine and the dual
    opterons make rendering in photoworks a dream.

    paul
     
    Paul, Feb 21, 2005
    #6
  7. Ben

    Ben Guest

    Paul,
    What is your benchmark. What video board, harddirve, ....how much?
     
    Ben, Feb 21, 2005
    #7
  8. Ben

    P. Guest

    Ben,

    You might want to search this newsgroup and the performance section of
    the SolidWorks discussion groups as this ground has been gone over
    many, many times before. Not much has changed in the last few months
    and AMD is still the best in the bang for buck category.
     
    P., Feb 21, 2005
    #8
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