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recommendations on a new computer

Anonymous
Not applicable
We are about to buy a new Dell computer. We need some help deciding on the graphics card and whether to go with a dual processor machine or a quad processor machine.

We have narrowed our choice down to a Dell Precision 690 with a 4 year onsite warrantee. This machine will be simultaneously running ArchiCAD, MS Outlook, MS word, Excel, Smart FTP, Internet Explorer and printing. Our data files are stored on a Network Attached Storage hard drive.

We will get the computer with two graphics cards so that we can run three 20" or 21" LCD monitors. We have tried the Matrox three monitor card but returned it because we were not happy with the performance. Our choices for graphics card from Dell are two 256MB PCIe x16 ATI FireGL V7200, dual monitor cards or two 256MB PCIe x16 nVidia Quadro FX 3500, dual monitor cards. The two nVidia cards would cost us about $600.00 for both cards versus the two ATI cards.

Is there any advantage to spending the extra money on the nVidia cards?

Our other choice is whether to buy a dual processor machine or a quad processor machine. Our choices are:
dual processor machine with Dual Core Intel® Xeon® Processors 5150 2.66GHz, 4MB L2,1333

or a

quad processor machine with four Dual Core Intel® Xeon® Processors 5120 1.86GHz, 4MB L2,1066
This system is about $500.00 more than the dual processor machine above.

or a


quad processor machine with four Dual Core Intel® Xeon® Processors 5140 2.33GHz, 4MB L2,1333
This system is about $1100.00 more than the dual processor machine above.

Is there a substantial advantage to spending more on a quad machine versus the dual machine listed above?

If we do go with a quad machine should we blow our budget and get the quad 2.33 machine?

Thank you for your input and advice.

Mahalo,
John
13 REPLIES 13
TomWaltz
Participant
One major factor to consider: Archicad is not multi-processor. While a 4-processor machine might let you run more applications at once, Archicad itself will not run any faster on a four processor machine than it will a single processor machine. Based on the apps you are running, I would not spend the money on the quad.

The only exception to that is the Lightworks rendering engine. It is multi-processor and will take advantage of the additional processors. It's your call whether you do enough renderings for that to be worthwhile.
Tom Waltz
Stress Co_
Advisor
This is the one-and-only reason I preferred AC9 w/ plotmaker over AC10.

I could update my layouts in Plotmaker and go back to work in Archicad.
Worst case is always the layout with multiple Sketch-engine rendered views

On the plus side...It gives me time to catch up on ArchiTalk.
Marc Corney, Architect
Red Canoe Architecture, P. A.

Mac OS 10.15.7 (Catalina) //// Mac OS 14.5 (Sonoma)
Processor: 3.6 GHz 8-Core Intel Core i9 //// Apple M2 Max
Memory: 48 GB 2667 MHz DDR4 //// 32 GB
Graphics: Radeon Pro 580X 8GB //// 12C CPU, 30C GPU
ArchiCAD 25 (5010 USA Full) //// ArchiCAD 27 (4030 USA Full)
Karl Ottenstein
Moderator
Stress wrote:
This is the one-and-only reason I preferred AC9 w/ plotmaker over AC10.
Well, you can still do that with AC 10...by having one file having just the layouts and reference views stored in the model file. Have both ArchiCADs open, just as you used to have AC and PM open...

For small projects, the benefits of having everything integrated outweigh the benefits that you are missing from PM, I think. (Especially in 11 with Virtual Trace.) But, for larger projects, particularly those that bring in drawings from a variety of different files (and permit separate instances of AC to start to generate the updated drrawings)...breaking things apart and having multiple processors can be a benefit.

If you do lots of renderings, John, or video editing, then I'd go for the quad or higher since thoses apps will really take advantage of the extra processors. (All of LW, C4D, Artlantis, etc will use as many processors as you have.)

Personally, I'm sick and tired of all of the cr*p that Dell and other PC manufactures place on their computers that take hours to uninstall...followed by hours of doing updates because the computer doesn't arrive with current software... so I'm planning on moving to Apple for my next primary workstation.

Karl

PS Just checked the Dell site for the Precision 690 you are looking at, and it sure seems to be more expensive than a comparably configured Mac Pro...
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier   •   macOS Sonoma 14.7.1, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB
Anonymous
Not applicable
BANNED_Karl wrote:
PS Just checked the Dell site for the Precision 690 you are looking at, and it sure seems to be more expensive than a comparably configured Mac Pro...
Karl,

How much less expensive was the MAC machine than the DEll machine?

We would probably be open to switching to a MAC based system in our office except for two major reasons.

1) The software conversion would be thousands of dollars to introduce a MAC based system.

2) We use microsoft outlook for our e-mail, scheduling, contacts and general communication.
Because the MAC version of outlook does not have critical features that we use we are relucatate to introduce a MAC machine into the office. If all of the features were the same we would be more open to using a MAC machine.

Thank you for your input. It is very helpful.

Aloha,
John
Karl Ottenstein
Moderator
The configuration I looked at was around $700-$900 cheaper. And, the Mac hardware design is vastly superior.

But, the conversion is a huge thing, as you note.

Outlook isn't available on Mac OS X any longer...instead, Microsoft has Entourage, part of Mac Office.

Software costs are the big thing I'll be facing, too, as not everyone is as kind as Graphisoft and Abvent in giving you a choice of Mac or Windows for the same license fee.

But, each manufacturer has policies that can help. For example, if you're about to upgrade your Adobe Suite to CS3, you can instead crossgrade to the Mac platform. There might be an option to simply crossgrade. In either case, you'd have to phone Adobe direct sales. Maxon/Cinema 4D would also be a call to direct sales. Etc.

With Microsoft, you either have to eat it and buy Office Mac...or you can buy Parallels which will allow you to run your windows Office apps on a Mac running OS X.

Piranesi has a 'cross grade' fee of around $80 to move a license from one platform to the other.

And...of course, there's the option of just running windows on Apple hardware with Bootcamp....

A lot of hours whichever way you go... 😞

Karl
One of the forum moderators
AC 28 USA and earlier   •   macOS Sonoma 14.7.1, MacBook Pro M2 Max 12CPU/30GPU cores, 32GB
Erich
Booster
John,

Just another thing to think about, the Mac machines can also run windows either via a dual boot configuration (running Apple's Boot Camp, currently a free beta download) or in a virtual environment with an application such a Parallels, or both depending on your particular need. This can be a good way to transition to the Mac platform without dumping the programs and process you are already using.

If you just want to get a well engineered PC and the pricing works out for you, then a Mac with Boot Camp works very well. I currently use my Macbook Pro in this configuration to draw in AutoCAD when working at home( our office has not yet made the switch from flat cad). About the only drawback I have found thus far is some of the keys are layed out differently with an apple keyboard.

Good luck with the workstation hunt.
Erich

AC 19 6006 & AC 20
Mac OS 10.11.5
15" Retina MacBook Pro 2.6
27" iMac Retina 5K
Stress Co_
Advisor
Karl wrote:
Stress wrote:
This is the one-and-only reason I preferred AC9 w/ plotmaker over AC10.
For small projects, the benefits of having everything integrated outweigh the benefits that you are missing from PM, I think. (Especially in 11 with Virtual Trace.) But, for larger projects, particularly those that bring in drawings from a variety of different files (and permit separate instances of AC to start to generate the updated drrawings)...breaking things apart and having multiple processors can be a benefit.
I want my cake and to eat it too. A Multi-processor Archicad.
Marc Corney, Architect
Red Canoe Architecture, P. A.

Mac OS 10.15.7 (Catalina) //// Mac OS 14.5 (Sonoma)
Processor: 3.6 GHz 8-Core Intel Core i9 //// Apple M2 Max
Memory: 48 GB 2667 MHz DDR4 //// 32 GB
Graphics: Radeon Pro 580X 8GB //// 12C CPU, 30C GPU
ArchiCAD 25 (5010 USA Full) //// ArchiCAD 27 (4030 USA Full)
KeesW
Advocate
I've bought two new computers for my office a couple of months ago. We bought them with quad core for the future. Although AC10 doesn't use multiple processors, future versions are bound to do so and it will save us upgrading when this happens. We are also running XP Pro64 (to be changed to Vista 64 when we get AC11) because a 64 bit OS can make use of more than 2GB of RAM.

We looked at Dell and yes, getting these with similar specifications to an Apple is much more expensive (in AUS a couple of thousand $ more). So we got ours built to quite high specifications which cost less than a Mac and was much cheaper than a Dell.
Cornelis (Kees) Wegman

cornelis wegman architects
AC 5 - 26 Dell XPS 8940 Win 10 16GB 1TB SSD 2TB HD RTX 3070 GPU
Laptop: AC 24 - 26 Win 10 16GB 1TB SSD RTX 3070 GPU
Stephen Dolbee
Booster
John,

I have a Precision 650 (3 or 4 years old), and have been quite happy with it. One benefit of the Precision is, you can get it with one processor and upgrade in the future. The processor price will probably be much less by then. While I have always been happy with Dell/XP, like Karl, I also am thinking of switching to Mac. Either way, my next primary workstation will be a laptop.

Stetve
AC19(9001), 27" iMac i7, 12 gb ram, ATI Radeon HD 4850 512mb, OS 10.12.6