I work for an engineering company and we have recently updated our software from 2015 to the 2017 version of Inventor, and in my case, i use Inventor Professional,.
We work with assemblies up to about 2000 parts, but usually only about 1000. Most of the assemblies are working "okay", but still not smoothly. One problem i've had in particular is when i create drawings for these large assemblies and it becomes pretty much impossible to work on (waiting 5-10 minutes to just move a view to a different part of the sheet!)
Can anybody give some genuine advice on how to sort this out?
Things i've tried :
Configuring application & document settings to suit performance over qualty.
Disabling all of the "Add ins", apart from pipe runs and frame generator.
Installing the latest service pack for the software.
Closing other programs that may have high CPU usage.
Computer Specs:
Processor - Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-1620 v2 @ 3.70GHz 3.70GHz
RAM - 16GB
Graphics Card - NVIDIA Quadro K2000
Now one thing that we're considering is upgrading our RAM, but the thing is, when the large assemblies aren't responding and i open up task manager, it says im only using about 10GB out of the 16GB that i have.
So if i increased my RAM, up to lets say 24GB, will this actually have a noticeable effect even though I'm currently not maxing it out?
As you can see, 1306 occurrences in this assembly and just under 6GB of RAM being used, but still running ridiculously slow!
Are you working over a network or locally?
Working with Vault?
@mdavis22569 We are working over a company network, and no we don't use vault.
Even when we were still on the 2015 version, it was sometimes slow, but never this bad.
Please specify what your graphics card driver version is at..
DO you have the design data pointing to a network location?
For a test move all your files locally and see if there's any changes. Inventor was not designed to work over the network..
For a test disable (or uninstall) your Anti-Virus application to see if that makes a difference. If it does then you may need to apply the exception in your anti-virus application.
Mark Lancaster
& Autodesk Services MarketPlace Provider
Autodesk Inventor Certified Professional & not an Autodesk Employee
Likes is much appreciated if the information I have shared is helpful to you and/or others
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Hi! Adding more RAM may help because it could reduce the chance of using swap memory (harddrive). When you notice Inventor slows down, does the harddrive light flash quite a bit?
Purely based on number of components and documents, the assembly you are working on should not be considered large assembly in Inventor. We have internal and customer datasets 10 times larger still working okay on similar spec computer. But, it depends on geometry and other factors. Could you share the files with us? I can set up a secure account for you to load. Please send me an email (johnson.shiue@autodesk.com). I would like to understand the behavior better.
Many thanks!
Try moving the files to the local machine just to rule out the network. Use the Pack and Go to collect and the required files then create a new Project file just to test the local machine. This way you can rule out the network.
WAN only gives max 150 mbs, you might try using a Cloud based system that sync's your local machine using the WAN so that you have access to the files on your machine all the time. This will give you the instance access and they can slowly update over the WAN after you save as the files are on your machine as well as on sync'd on your server.
Try Microsoft's OneDrive, see if it will work for you.
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