Hi
I have read a some of threads in other forums about quadro vs gtx, but i wanted to check yours.
We are using inventor, fusion and some open source simulation programs.
We are getting 2 new workstations here and our IT tells us to buy a 2000M because itll make less problems with inventor.
I did use inventor at home with my 1080 and had no problems at all.
Do you think it is worth it to fight for the 1060?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi
I have read a some of threads in other forums about quadro vs gtx, but i wanted to check yours.
We are using inventor, fusion and some open source simulation programs.
We are getting 2 new workstations here and our IT tells us to buy a 2000M because itll make less problems with inventor.
I did use inventor at home with my 1080 and had no problems at all.
Do you think it is worth it to fight for the 1060?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by lichtzeichenanlage. Go to Solution.
Solved by TrippyLighting. Go to Solution.
The Nvidia Quadro and AMD Fire GL graphics cards are considered Pro Graphics Cards have drivers optimized for Open GL. Historically that has always been at the expense of stable, fast and (relatively) bug free Direct X drivers. That is also the reason why these perform often terribly in games that mosty use the Direct X API.
I am not sure you are familiar with c’t Magazin Fuer Computer Technik. I’ve been a reader for 25 years and every time they’ve tested these Pro graphics cards they performed under par in Direct X.
Both, Fusion 360 and Inventor use the Direct X API
A;so, generally the Pro graphics cards use the same graphics chips as the gaming cards, but lag behind a generation or two.
I am wondering where your IT department is getting their info from.
The Nvidia Quadro and AMD Fire GL graphics cards are considered Pro Graphics Cards have drivers optimized for Open GL. Historically that has always been at the expense of stable, fast and (relatively) bug free Direct X drivers. That is also the reason why these perform often terribly in games that mosty use the Direct X API.
I am not sure you are familiar with c’t Magazin Fuer Computer Technik. I’ve been a reader for 25 years and every time they’ve tested these Pro graphics cards they performed under par in Direct X.
Both, Fusion 360 and Inventor use the Direct X API
A;so, generally the Pro graphics cards use the same graphics chips as the gaming cards, but lag behind a generation or two.
I am wondering where your IT department is getting their info from.
I think they only look into the Autodesk recommendations for Inventor.
They are only showing Quadro-Cards in these.
Also i found this:
I think they only look into the Autodesk recommendations for Inventor.
They are only showing Quadro-Cards in these.
Also i found this:
@Anonymous wrote:
I think they only look into the Autodesk recommendations for Inventor.
They are only showing Quadro-Cards in these
I'd trust that post more than any recommendation on an AD page.
There have been multiple users of Fusion 360 that have reported not only performance problems but also graphics glitches with mostly Quadro cards.
@Anonymous wrote:
I think they only look into the Autodesk recommendations for Inventor.
They are only showing Quadro-Cards in these
I'd trust that post more than any recommendation on an AD page.
There have been multiple users of Fusion 360 that have reported not only performance problems but also graphics glitches with mostly Quadro cards.
Thanks for your statement 😄
ill show them this post
Thanks for your statement 😄
ill show them this post
@Anonymous
I have done extensive testing with Fusion on both Quadro and GTX cards and can say with no doubt that the GTX cards perform much faster and don't have half the gfx glitches as the Quadro cards.
I started with a highend Quadro card and had nothing but performance and gfx problems. I switched to a GTX card and have seen way better performance and hardly any gfx glitches.
I haven't tested much with Inventor so I will let someone else answer that, but I can assure you the Quadro is not good for Fusion.
Phil Procario Jr.
Owner, Laser & CNC Creations
@Anonymous
I have done extensive testing with Fusion on both Quadro and GTX cards and can say with no doubt that the GTX cards perform much faster and don't have half the gfx glitches as the Quadro cards.
I started with a highend Quadro card and had nothing but performance and gfx problems. I switched to a GTX card and have seen way better performance and hardly any gfx glitches.
I haven't tested much with Inventor so I will let someone else answer that, but I can assure you the Quadro is not good for Fusion.
Phil Procario Jr.
Owner, Laser & CNC Creations
We just had a pretty hot discussion with IT just now XD
I can kind of understand there point. There is a company that builds these workstations for us, and they only give inventor-support and warranty on workstations with certified hardware... 😕
But we found a compromise, one of two workstations will get a gtx1060 and one will get a quadro 2000m.
We just had a pretty hot discussion with IT just now XD
I can kind of understand there point. There is a company that builds these workstations for us, and they only give inventor-support and warranty on workstations with certified hardware... 😕
But we found a compromise, one of two workstations will get a gtx1060 and one will get a quadro 2000m.
I know this thread is a bit old, but I was curious to know how the GTX 1060 unit is working out over the Quadro and via versa? Thanks!
I know this thread is a bit old, but I was curious to know how the GTX 1060 unit is working out over the Quadro and via versa? Thanks!
my colleque told me that my working pc with the gtx1060 seems faster than his with the 2000m
my colleque told me that my working pc with the gtx1060 seems faster than his with the 2000m
Thanks so much for that info! I've got a couple of school programs that are looking to be able to run Fusion and some other software, but needed a more dedicated graphics card.
Thanks again!
Thanks so much for that info! I've got a couple of school programs that are looking to be able to run Fusion and some other software, but needed a more dedicated graphics card.
Thanks again!
This video is pretty much about SolidWorks, but you might pull some Fusion 360 related information, too.
Edit: Typo removed
This video is pretty much about SolidWorks, but you might pull some Fusion 360 related information, too.
Edit: Typo removed
Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.