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AutoDesk Inventor Graphics Card advice

16 REPLIES 16
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Message 1 of 17
srm37T6KNN
2323 Views, 16 Replies

AutoDesk Inventor Graphics Card advice

Hello all,

 

I am PhD student who needs to use Inventor. I am about to buy a new laptop to use both in the lab and run Inventor but I need some advice on what graphics card would be the best option. 

 

I have a limited budget, don't want to spend more than £600. The project will be pretty limited to only maybe a dozen parts per assembly.

 

Specifically how does the Intel HD Graphics 620 handle the software? Many of the laptops in my price range carry that card and i was wondering how it holds up.

 

Thanks for your time and advice.

16 REPLIES 16
Message 2 of 17
CCarreiras
in reply to: srm37T6KNN

HI!

 

It will work... but don't expect great performance.

 

Also, your way of modeling will be an important factor, so,

Avoid too much links between files,  lost files etc. Use a Project file to help on this.

When modeling, keep looking to the red cross and resolve any problem that occurs.

 

And good luck for you project. 

CCarreiras

EESignature

Message 3 of 17
philip1009
in reply to: srm37T6KNN

Do you mean more than 600 for the video card or for the whole system?

Message 4 of 17
srm37T6KNN
in reply to: philip1009

The whole system. It not the best budget but anything more would dig in to my travel budget. If it is totally necessary then I don't mind spending more.

Message 5 of 17
philip1009
in reply to: srm37T6KNN

The Intel HD graphics will work with Inventor, it's just not the best since the Intel gpu is more for media than for 3D graphics, if you can spend a little more and get an Nvidia or AMD video card, you will get better 3D performance.  And no, you don't have to get the "pro" level Nvidia or AMD cards, a regular geforce gtx 1000 series or Radeon RX will work just the same.  The only reason to get a pro card is for the extra ton of ram or for very specific workflows that you won't be using with only a dozen part assemblies.

Message 6 of 17
CCarreiras
in reply to: srm37T6KNN

Between AMD and Nvidia, i advise you to choose nVidia.

In my experience, they are better, regarding Inventor use (and Autodesk in general i guess).

CCarreiras

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Message 7 of 17
leowarren34
in reply to: CCarreiras

Any Nvidia will work better as cuda is a great advantage against AMD, however for a GPU you will looking at atleast £700+ but it'll be capable of more. However if you're working with simple geometry and only a dozen parts the IGPU should be fine.

Leo Warren
Autodesk Student Ambassador Diamond
Please accept as solution and give likes if applicable.
Message 8 of 17
dgorsman
in reply to: srm37T6KNN

The Intel "GPU" is built in to the processor (it's not a separate device) and shares system RAM.  So don't skimp on that either if you go that route.  While you can kinda-sorta get away with using an on-chip GPU, you want a dedicated GPU if your coursework actually depends on Inventor (i.e. this isn't something just thrown in).

 

And yes - it's worth sacrificing a "travel budget".

----------------------------------
If you are going to fly by the seat of your pants, expect friction burns.
"I don't know" is the beginning of knowledge, not the end.


Message 9 of 17
leowarren34
in reply to: dgorsman

I would recommend as a GPU a 1060 6gb as a minimum but a 1070+ or a quadro would be vastly better and definitely worth spending extra on.

Leo Warren
Autodesk Student Ambassador Diamond
Please accept as solution and give likes if applicable.
Message 10 of 17
CCarreiras
in reply to: leowarren34

Keep in mind the budget.... only the nvidia Quadro card will cost about 500$...

CCarreiras

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Message 11 of 17
leowarren34
in reply to: CCarreiras

An older lower end quadro will do just as well as quadros are excellent at 3d cad for their price.

Leo Warren
Autodesk Student Ambassador Diamond
Please accept as solution and give likes if applicable.
Message 12 of 17
CCarreiras
in reply to: leowarren34

A Quadro card, typically comes in workstations, not in "Home" PC's. If you know a workstation below the 1000$, tell me... maybe i will buy it!! Smiley LOL

CCarreiras

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Message 13 of 17
philip1009
in reply to: CCarreiras

The Radeon Pro WX series are pretty good cards, especially compared to quadro in terms of price.

Message 14 of 17
leowarren34
in reply to: philip1009

I think we have gone off course as good luck trying to get a quadro or fire pro in a laptop below £1000 let alone £500, I think a GTX1060 would be more than adequate on a quad core with 8-16gb of ram.

Leo Warren
Autodesk Student Ambassador Diamond
Please accept as solution and give likes if applicable.
Message 15 of 17
srm37T6KNN
in reply to: srm37T6KNN

Great thanks a lot for all the advice guys! I have now does some more looking and have picked out a laptop with a Nvidia graphs card! 

 

Thanks again!

Message 16 of 17
Frederick_Law
in reply to: srm37T6KNN

Inventor ran well on my Dell E7240 i7-4600 HD4400 graphic.

Assembly with around 100 parts.

Shaded with edge doesn't display properly some time.

 

Some laptop with nVidia graphic actually has 2 graphic controllers: nVidia and Intel.

You'll need to change some settings to get Inventor to use nVidia graphic.

Message 17 of 17
leowarren34
in reply to: Frederick_Law

You can disable the IGPU in the graphics accelerator.

Leo Warren
Autodesk Student Ambassador Diamond
Please accept as solution and give likes if applicable.

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