We add new 3D SCANS every week

Shop Now
Search
Cart
Sign in
  • offerCustomer zone
  • offerYour special offers
  • offerYour orders
  • offerEdit account

  • offerAdd project
  • offerLiked projects
  • offerView your artist profile

  • Dark mode

Information Clause

In accordance with the art. 13 section 1 and 2 of the European Parliament and Council Regulation 2016/679 of the 27th April, 2016 on the protection of natural persons, with regard to the processing of personal data and on the free movement of such data, and repealing Directive 95/46/EC (General Data Protection Regulation), hereafter RODO, I hereby inform that:

1. EVERMOTION S.C., 8 Przędzalniana Str., 15-688 Białystok, Poland is the Administrator of your Personal Data (APD)

2. Data Protection Inspector can be reached through e-mail: iod@evermotion.org

3. Your personal data are to be processed on the basis of art. 6 section 1 letter a, b and f of RODO in order to:
a) prepare, conclude and execute the agreement and for other purposes approved by you,
b) to execute the legitimate interest like marketing of products and the agreement, claim assertion or defence against claims resulting from the law regulations.

4. Entities entitled to the reception of your personal data may be the authorised public bodies; mail providers; providers of the services covered by the agreement; responsible for debt recovery, keeping the archives, document utilization, legal consulting, technical services, IT services and accountancy.

5. Your personal data shall not be transferred to the third country, nor to the international bodies.

6. Your personal data shall be processed within the period of the agreement and upon your additional consent until you withdraw it. APD shall keep the data for the period of any civil law claim execution connected with the agreement.

7. You have the right to demand an access to your personal data, to correct or to delete the data if there is no other basis for the processing or any other purpose of such processing or to limit the processing of the data, to transfer the data to another administrator and to raise objections to the further data processing if there is no legal basis for further processing and to withdraw any previous consent.

8. You provide the personal data voluntarily, however they are necessary to conclude the agreement. The refusal of providing such data may result in the refusal of the agreement conclusion.

9. You have the right to lodge a complaint to the Personal Data Protection Office when in your opinion the data processing violates the regulations of General Data Protection Regulation of the 27 April, 2016 (RODO).

10. Your data will be automatically processed, including the form of profiling.
11. You are obligated to forward above mentioned information to your representative, especially if you appointed this person in the agreement as the contact person or as the representative for the agreement execution.

OK

Understanding V-Ray Hybrid rendering

Chaos Group 2017-06-27 10:02 article  > Software

Maximize your computing power with hybrid rendering.

This article appeared first on Chaos Group Blog. Top image by Dabarti Studio.

V-Ray Hybrid Benchmarks

To find out the speed boost we get by adding CPUs to the GPU mix, we benchmarked two V-Ray CUDA scenes from our friends at Dabarti Studio.

Hardware

CPUs: 2 x Intel Xeon CPU E5-2687W v3 3.10 GHz, total of 40 logical CPU cores RAM: 128 GB, GPUs: 2 x NVIDIA Quadro GP100 with 16GB each, total of 7,168 GPU cores

 

Engine: V-Ray 3.6 CUDA, Resolution: 1920×1080, Noise threshold: 0.01, GPUs + CPUs Time: 4:27 (267s); GPUs only Time: 5:03 (303s) 13% longer than GPU + CPU; CPUs only Time: 26:25 (1585s) 520% longer than GPUs alone. Scene courtesy of Dabarti Studio

 

Salt and Pepper scene

Engine: V-Ray 3.6 CUDA, Resolution: 1920×1080, Noise threshold: 0.01. GPUs + CPUs Time: 9:11 (551s); GPUs only Time: 11:33 (693s) 25% longer than GPU+CPU. CPUs only Time: 40:52 (2452s) 354% longer than GPU alone. Scene courtesy of Dabarti Studio

For these scenes, the addition of CPUs helped reduce render times by 13% and 25%. It’s a welcome speed boost, rather than leaving these powerful CPUs idle.

Let’s consider a few use cases for V-Ray Hybrid:

  • Maximize your computing power If you have a powerful workstation, say 40 CPU cores and 4 GPUs, you can take advantage of all its computing power. Nothing is left idle.
  • Use all your render nodes Many artists and studios have GPU & CPU workstations and CPU render nodes. With V-Ray Hybrid they can render using all the hardware they have.
  • CPU fallback In case your scene won’t fit into your GPU RAM limits, you can still render on CPU.

Upgrade to GPUs as you go

As CPU machines are ready to be replaced, V-Ray Hybrid can help ease the transition to more GPU rendering, while continuing to take advantage of existing CPU resources. Additionally, if there is an empty PCIe slot on a workstation or render node, adding a GPU can give it a radical speed boost without replacing the whole machine.

A few things to note

  • V-Ray Hybrid and V-Ray Production renderer: It’s important to note that the V-Ray Hybrid (GPU–CPU CUDA) renderer is not the same as the V-Ray Production (CPU) renderer, and the two engines will continue to remain separate.
  • GPU cores vs. CPU cores While V-Ray Hybrid can render on CPUs and GPUs simultaneously, CPU cores and GPU cores are not the same. For example, a GPU with 2560 cores is not simply 320 times faster than an 8 core CPU. To determine the actual speed difference, real-world benchmark tests are required.
Author: Chaos Group Editor: Michał Franczak
Tags: vray hardware rendering gpu cpu
You may also like...
Flickering free flythrough animation in Vray

Flickering free flythrough animation in Vray

TipOfTheWeek: particleflow pt. 2: Make cool effects using 3ds max curve editor
×

LEAVE A COMMENT

You need to be logged in to leave a comment. Don't have account? Register now.