Forum Moderators: wheatpenny, TheBryster
Vue F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Oct 26 8:50 am)
Hyperthreading is a total joke when it comes to rendering or any other computationally rigorous application. Unless you have an application that is perfectly optimized for HT, you will not see a performance gain, and in most cases you will see a performance decline as illustrated by Max3DD3. Best to turn it off in the bios as see for yourself. The reason your P4 shows up as 2 cpu's is that HT is turned on, which is a software gimmick that makes the OS think that there is 2 cpus, when in actuality there is only one.
Hyperthreading is good for single CPU PCs as you get system resources back for doing secondary work when a render or other CPU intensive operation is happening. Vue 5 Infinite is the only Vue version that can handle more than 2 CPUs. If you have a dual and include Hyperthreading you will in effect have 4 CPUs. This is no good for Vue 5 Esprit or Vue 5 Studio.
sacada is right. One of my PCs is also a Dual Xeon 2.8 GHz, and it is very well suited to rendering in Vue Infinite (see http://www.renderosity.com/messages.ez?ForumID=12368&Form.ShowMessage=2188668). However, Vue 5 esprit / studio is NOT a good match for a Dual Xeon config (some of the CPU power is not used).
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Been running some renders recently in vue5 and i noticed that cpu usage was at 50%, obviously not what is best for speed of render so i decided to change HT in bios to see if it made a change. Scene with HTT: 440s Scene No HTT: 398s 10% gain - also shows cpu usage at 100% which makes me happy as its money well spent! running 2x2.8ghz 800mhz @3.0ghz + 2gb ram hope this helps anyone with the same problem! Max