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How fast is your Inventor PC really?

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Message 1 of 2,219
Raider_71
144849 Views, 2218 Replies

How fast is your Inventor PC really?

Hi guys,

 

We have had to do some testing on a bunch of Inventor PC's recently to determine which of the PC's needs to be replaced. Obviously we needed to find out which of the PC's are the worst eprformers as there was only budget to replace 50% of the design PC's. So we thought the Darwin theory will come in handy right... 🙂

 

Anyways I started searching on the net for toppics on how to benchmark an Inventor PC. Then I thought whats the point of using gaming benchmark tools because Inventor is not a game and there are more aspects than just graphics performance when it comes to percieved performance on an Inventor PC right.

So we decided to create our own Inventor benchmark tool which tests various aspects of an Inventor PC to give us an overview of our PC's performance. This then helped us make a decision as to whcih pc's to replace.

 

We have made the tool available free of charge to anyone interested in checking how their PC stacks up to their peers or friends. 🙂

 

Please download it here and post your results here as well if you want. Would be interesting to see what beast workstations are out there.

 

I would like to say thanks to Kirk #karthur1, for helping in testing the app.

 

Please feel free to send any suggestions our way. There is an email link in the app.

 

Download and Install

The application will work with Inventor 2014 to 2016 only.

IMPORTANT: After installation there will be an Inventor Bench icon on your desktop that looks like this: 32x32.png

 

 

My resluts:

HP Elitebook 8560w with an SSD upgrade.

Inventor Bench.jpg

 

 

2,218 REPLIES 2,218
Message 841 of 2,219
Neil_Cross
in reply to: tom_vierling

Haha yea I intentionally made it ridiculous so it didn't look like I was hoping to pass it off as real, or is it, THE HIVE MIND IS REAL, BELIEVE IN THE HIVE MIND Robot MadRobot MadRobot IndifferentRobot Indifferent

 

I'm still here with my 4790K resisting the pull of Broadwell-E and the X99 benefits, will definitely be jumping to Kaby Lake though.   

Message 842 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

sorry for the delay guys.

i just tested to change all the inventor temp files (and content lib etc) to a fixed local folder so that there is no reason for the program to check network folders.

result: still bad graphics intensive test, still inventor PC index score <4.0.

next step: try to get inventor 16/17, or do u have other ideas i can check?

Message 843 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

Hey guys, i did the step from windows 7 to windows 10, from inventor 14 to 17 and from the old domain to the new one.

 

Here is the comparison. 50% more performance, but still not what i expected.

First pic is the old software/windows/domain

 

S.pngS_neu.png

Message 844 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

Hey, so I've been looking through quite a bit of these, and it seems to come down to a number of factors on your end.

 

Firstly, you don't have the K model 4790. This is around at least a 10% performance drop

 

2nd You're ram is a slower clock speed. 1600 vs 2100/3000

 

Thirdly, and I find this can make a big difference in the score without being glaringly obvious. Is the difference is Solid state drive from brand to brand.

I find the stock dell ones (LiteON) to be quite slow in the test I have done around our office.

 

Fourth, you're video card is no where near the DirectX performer of the 1070, which is what drives inventor. Although this test and the program are primarly processor based.

 

Here are a couple good references for individual component comparisons. Not definitive by any means but a decent way to compare easily. And the numbers seem to hold up to the results we've seen from the benchmark.

 

https://www.cpubenchmark.net/singleThread.html

 

http://www.videocardbenchmark.net/high_end_gpus.html

 

Hope I could maybe give you somewhere to start looking.

Cheers

Message 845 of 2,219
Neil_Cross
in reply to: Anonymous

Way back in this thread I posted a score of 12+ on a i7-4790K, same 1600MHz DDR3 RAM, very similar cheap SATA3 SSD.  I've since put in a Samsung SM961 512gb drive and it made exactly diddly squat difference to this test.  I also upgraded from a 970 to a 1070 and it made exactly no difference as well.

 

@Anonymous that GPU is pretty bad like.  Forget about the test, the 1GB of VRAM in that card just isn't going to cut it on Windows 10 and Inv2017.  If you can, drop around $130-150 on a GTX1050Ti or 1060 and you'll notice a world of difference in performance and reliability.  A struggling Quadro will be much more unstable than a new modern unstressed GeForce with Inventor.

Message 846 of 2,219
Mirko_Opitz
in reply to: Raider_71

Is that any good?

inv-bench.PNG

Message 847 of 2,219
Neil_Cross
in reply to: Mirko_Opitz


@Mirko_Opitz wrote:

Is that any good?

inv-bench.PNG


Yep that's pretty good for a pre-built workstation. I might have expected slightly better scores from that CPU in some areas but that could be background software/processes/services holding things up a little, but 8+ is good.

Message 848 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Neil_Cross

Neil, have you had any experience with AMD cards by chance? I know in the older Toms hardware benchmarks they seemed to handle inventor better.

 

Just wondering if that still may be the case? I know we have two identical computers one with a W7000 and one with dual K5000's. The W7000 scores a full point higher with just one card running, and a half a point with both.

 

Message 849 of 2,219
Neil_Cross
in reply to: Anonymous

Personally (and purely personal opinion) I don't take benchmarks for Inventor seriously from somewhere like Tom's Hardware, unless there's someone behind that work with some credibility and significant experience with this software, it's too specialised and isn't comparable to gaming benchmarks, so I wouldn't recognise the results as being definitive and legit as I wouldn't know for sure that it was done in the right way with consistent and reliable data sets.

 

But yea I've got a fair bit of experience and history with AMD.  Before I mention more though, FYI Inventor doesn't support dual or SLI cards the same way in that it doesn't support dual Xeons.  So for your dual Quadro system, one of those cards is doing literally nothing for Inventor, which is why you see zero scaling with performance on that system.  I sincerely hope you weren't sold the system on the advice that the two cards would benefit Inventor, because they most certainly do not.

 

Comparing the two identical systems, 1 point can be within normal variance and likely isn't anything to do with the GPU.  You could lose a point purely through a keen background process existing on one system but not another, taking minimal CPU resource causing the tests to run ever so slightly slower, I think in real terms you're not likely to notice any real world differences between 2 systems with a 1 point variance.  Can you do a 5 or 10 cycle test on both systems and post the results here?

 

Regarding AMD though, they've had a choppy history with Autodesk, at one point in the past (a long time ago) Showcase just didn't run at all on AMD cards and Inventor had all sorts of graphical issues.  AMD also never had as good of a driver release schedule as NVIDIA, the NVIDIA team release drivers on a regular basis whereas AMD could go several months sometimes longer without any software optimised drivers.

 

Regarding the actual hardware, AMD are widely considered to be second best and are openly happy to admit they cannot compete with NVIDIA at the top end of the market.  For example with this generation of gaming cards, AMD have absolutely nothing to compete with even the GTX1070 which is the current third tier card from NVIDIA after the Titan X and GTX1080.  So AMD with their current generation of cards are way behind NVIDIA.

 

It's kind of a different story for 3D CAD though.  I personally own a FirePro W9100 and a Radeon RX 380 from AMD, and from NVIDIA a GTX1070, GTX970, Quadro M4000 and a Quadro 2000.  In terms of real world performance, they're all pretty much identical under light load except for the Quadro 2000 which is too old to cope.  On the bench test, again all the cards bar the Quadro 2000 push out the same performance.  Variations will begin to occur when the system hits VRAM limits on each card, the W9100 has 16GB of VRAM whereas the RX 380 has 2GB and the GTX970 has 3.5-4GB.  Another thing I noted with AMD is that their FirePro cards run extremely hot, it didn't take much for the W9100 to hit 92 degrees causing the awful reference blower fan to scream like a jet engine, causing some thermal throttling on the core clock.

 

Soz for the long reply, the short answer is that as of today I would choose NVIDIA over AMD.  However AMD are soon going to be releasing their Radeon Pro cards which replace and supersede FirePro, so it remains to be seen what they'll be like with respect to actual performance and driver support for Autodesk software. 

 

 

 

 

Message 850 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Raider_71

How are these results for an ASUS ROG GL552VW-DH74? I thought they weren't too bad for a $1000 gaming laptop.

I've got a i7 6700HQ @2.6 GHz w/turbo boost and a GeForce 960m as well as 16GB RAM.

 

Benchmark Results.PNG

Message 851 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

verry good score for ine GTX 960m

Message 852 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Neil_Cross

Bonjour Neil

 

I WANT TO BUILD A PC FOR MY WORK THAT WILL BE FANLESS O DB

THE BIGGEST PURCHASES IN THE BOXING DAY AT THE END OF THE YEAR

Here is my little list if you have any proposal I am open, I did some research on the net, open box, cpu passive fan
And here is my list

 

https://ca.pcpartpicker.com/list/rqXsVY

Message 853 of 2,219
mdavis22569
in reply to: Anonymous

 I really like the case ....


Did you find this reply helpful ? If so please use the Accept as Solution or Kudos button below.

---------
Mike Davis

EESignature

Message 854 of 2,219
Neil_Cross
in reply to: Anonymous

Yea that's a nice looking case.

Perfectly good build, should be more than adequate however if it was my money I'd be choosing a few different parts.

I'd drop a few more $$ for the 6700K instead of the 6700, just in case you want to overclock in the future which is perfectly safe to do within reasonable limits.

You're buying two identical SSDs, are you thinking about putting them in RAID? Because that mobo doesn't have RAID support.

All the SSDs are SATA, if you're not going for a PCIe SSD boot drive (4x faster than a SATA SSD) I'd look to swap out that primary 128GB drive with a larger 512GB 2.5" SATA SSD rather than a M.2 SATA SSD.

If you shop around you can get a 6GB GTX 1060 for the price of that 4GB 1050Ti, there's not too much in it but the 1060 is a slightly better card.

There's not too much info on that fanless cooler so it'll be interesting to see how that performs and looks in a build, I'll await that as my H100i sounds like a space shuttle launch at full tilt.

Message 855 of 2,219
Neil_Cross
in reply to: Neil_Cross

In other news, someone brought this to my attention today, an official Autodesk video which I'd never seen before:

 

 

Has anyone else seen this? Some of the advice in here is questionable at best and I felt a little awkward watching it.

There's a lot of digression in there, but for example at 14:50 the guy goes on to say that the best recommended CPU setup for Inventor is dual Xeons... because... because it allows for the rest of your applications to have resource in addition to Inventor...?!

Dual Xeons are absolutely not a good idea for an Inventor workstation, massive waste of a LOT of money.  Your average user does not do enough at any one time to require more than 6 cores and 12 threads on one Xeon never mind needing two Xeons.  

The rest of the video feels like it's stuck in the past, maybe would have been relevant back in 2005 when you might have seen a benefit from disabling background pictures/Windows themes and shutting off Windows services, it feels like the guy is basing this info on still working with Pentium 4's and 512MB RAM with a GPU from 2005, but you just don't need to do that any more, modern hardware has vastly outpaced the development of Inventor, a large amount of the advice in that video is probably more potentially damaging to the functionality of your PC than any good at all.

I'd be curious to speak to this guy to ask where the metrics are for a lot of these recommendations, i.e what benchmarked performance gain did they see on a modern workstation after (his recommendation) changing the Inventor background from a gradient to a single colour!!??

Message 856 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Neil_Cross

Thank you neil excuse me for my english,
I took the 6700 because the TDP is 65w against 95w for the 6700K, I do not want OC, I'm looking for the absolute silence 0 DB, as for the M2 which is normally faster than the SSD it was for Installed OS (W10 pro) and Autodesk Inventor and all my templates, the other two SSDs are only for storage, I agree with you for the 1060, I leave on this GPU, however I stay with the 6700 in 65w for Use the NOFAN c95c,

Message 857 of 2,219
Neil_Cross
in reply to: Anonymous

Ok fair enough, just curious.  Makes sense if the TDP is that much lower, it'll give the cooler less work to do.

Just wondering, apologies if you know this, but do you know that M.2 just refers to the form factor/shape/size of the SSD? That ADATA M.2 drive will be exactly the same speed as the other drives as it's SATA based just like the other drives are.  

Message 858 of 2,219
Anonymous
in reply to: Neil_Cross

You are right neil for the M2 that I advise you for the OS and INVENTOR and the storage, you have more experience than me, I listen to you, I saw the video that you posted, I am not Agree for the double xeon and the inventor configuration.

Message 859 of 2,219
Neil_Cross
in reply to: Anonymous

I'm not saying there's anything wrong with the M.2 drive you've picked, it's perfectly fine.  I just thought you might have chosen the 128GB option thinking that it was a super fast drive which you'll only put essential programs on, when in fact it's no faster than the other drives you will have in the PC.

Message 860 of 2,219
tom_vierling
in reply to: Anonymous

If I may...

 

I agree with all of Neil's points. The best option for storage would probably be the 512GB SSD and remove the M.2 storage and aditional SSD (the 512GB version is the same price as 2 256GB SSD's) I am using a 120GB SSD at work, and I only have Inventor, Windows OS and some small programs and I have about 3GB of space left on it. There are times where I have to clear space on the drive just to open inventor (it requires 1GB of space left on your drive to even open inventor) so I would omit that drive.

 

However, I dislike the computer case for this build, especially given what you're trying to do. Your #1 enemy will be dust, especially since you will have no fans blowing air through the case and preventing some dust from getting on your heatsinks. In addition you have an open air case with the top open, allowing dust to fall directly on the heatsink and significantly reducing performance. I would recommend a case that has a closed top, or you could use this case and put something on top of the case to cover it!

HP Z240 Workstation i7-7700K, Nvidia Quadro P1000, Samsung 512GB NVME SSD, WD 1TB HDD, 16GB (2x8) DDR4 2400mhz, TriMonitor (1920x1080, 3840x2160, 1920x1080) Inventor Pro 2022, AutoCAD 2022

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