Guys,
Over the next 3 months, I will be building a new Workstation, and am going to require some advice & suggestions for this new build. Over the years XS members have gifted me with a tremendous wealth of knowledge & recommendation, so hopefully I?ll receive the same this time around.
I have built many Desktops from scratch, and also done significant upgrades to notebooks; so I?m very comfortable & familiar with hardware builds. However, this is going to be my first Workstation build, and will entail components & choices I'm not familiar with, and that?s where most of my questions are going to come from.
This build is essentially a ?future? build; Most of the critical components aren?t out yet, but are expected to release between September & November of this year. I?m giving myself a head-start to resolve some queries I have and be ready to pull the trigger once availability starts happening.
I?ll try & breakdown everything into as much detail as possible to make it easy for anyone responding.
Budget
I have a budget of $4,000. Realistically, I?d like to have the entire build from start to finish cost me $3,500, but I?ve added a $500 fluff so I don?t have to compromise a critical component or performance for the sake of meeting a deadbolt budget.
Usage
There are two primary usages of this machine.
- CGI Development & Rendering: This includes ZBrush & Maya, with Maxwell as the renderer. Fortunately Maxwell doesn?t have a limitation on the number of both Physical CPU?s & Threads. This is going to be the major usage of this machine. The development also includes a lot of plugins, like RealFlow, Hair, etc., and additional tools like Photoshop, Premiere, Vegas, After Effects, etc.
- Gaming: Gaming is very specifically limited to RTS games ? Starcraft, Command & Conquer, Company Of Heroes, etc. (NO fps / crysis etc!) I have a system with 2 X HD5870 Crossfire cards with an i7, and I cannot run Starcraft in ?Extreme? settings. Crashes in 5 seconds. Even in ?Ultra?, which is one step short of ?Extreme?, there is lag if I have too many units on screen ? and I have to keep Shadows at a minimum. I?d like to be able to max out settings fully & experience no lag.
Core Build
Although some of these components are not out yet, their release is just about a month or two away and most of the information has started to trickle out. Following is an abridged component list, which I will detail below:
Intel XEON E5-2600 V2 (Ivy Bridge-E) Series (Dual Socket / Dual CPU)*
Dual Socket LGA2011 Server Motherboard
GTX/SLI (700 Series) or Radeon/Crossfire (8000 Series) -- Dual Cards
32GB (4X8GB) DDR3 1600 ECC Memory
2 X 120GB SSD RAID1 (OS & Software)
2TB SATAIII 6.0Gb/s HDD (File Storage)
1200W PSU
Thermaltake Level 10 GT Case
2 X 27? LED Monitors
My main questions are going to be regarding Air Vs. Water Cooling, GTX Vs. Radeon, and PSU Advice. Other components I should be able to work out on my own, but I?ll give a little info on each:
CPU
Primarily, I will be going with the XEON E5-2600 V2 Series chip that is comparable to the current Xeon E5-2660 Sandy Bridge-EP chip; in other words ? 2.2 Ghz (3 Ghz Turbo Boost) equivalent Ivy Bridge chip, which if I?m not mistaken should be the Xeon E5-2660 V2 chip expected to release in September. Currently the Sandy Bridge-EP chip costs $1,300, and I?m hoping the V2 Ivy Bridge costs about the same. Depending on what the total cost comes out to, I may have to just go with 1 Chip for now, and then add a 2nd one about 3 ~ 6 months down the road ? whenever I can afford it.
Motherboard
I?m not sure if the current Dual-Socket LGA2011 Server boards support Ivy Bridge V2 chips or not; but either way, my main choices are Super Micro or ASUS. I have heard nothing but good things about Super Micro but never owned one. My personal experience with ASUS has been flawless, so I?d like to stick to ASUS unless someone convinces me otherwise.
Memory & Hard Drives shouldn?t be an issue. SSD for OS/Software & SATAIII for file storage. Depending on budget, I may go with 1, 2 or 3 27? LED Monitors. Eventually plan to have a 3-Monitor setup, but may have to start with just 1 to stay in budget.
For the Case, the Thermaltake Level 10 GT looks pretty good & solid. Not sure if there?s any reason to look elsewhere.
This brings me to my three main questions:
Air Cooling Vs. Water Cooling?
Obviously the Server chips don?t overclock so overclocking is not even an issue. I?ve read many different posts & articles, each giving a different opinion, and that?s why I?m undecided.
I?ve never done Water Cooling before so it would be a first for me; that & the fact that there?s no Overclocking involved favors Air Cooling. HOWEVER, I live in California and although I have an AC where the Workstation will sit ? I don?t always like to keep the AC running, and California is natively quite hot. Although the machine will not be running 24 hours a day constantly --- there will be periods when it will be running 24 hours a day when it?s rendering an animation.
The case obviously supports water cooling & expense should not be an issue - plus I'd love to learn something new. However, I just don?t know if I should or shouldn?t indulge in Water Cooling for this machine. I don?t know if Air will be enough to keep the machine cool for those 24 Hour rendering periods! Definitely need advice!
Whether you suggest Air or Water Cooling, I also need advice on the best possible Air Coolers to get (Keep in mind this would be a Dual-CPU Machine ? So I would need 2); and for Water ? the most reliable kit which is easier for a newbie to install & use and has good reputation of not leaking!
Radeon (8000 Series) or GTX (700 Series)?
I don?t want to make this a debate about AMD vs. nVidia. From what I gather, AMD is releasing consumer versions of its Radeon HD 8000 cards by October-November; however, GTX 800 series is not expected to release till sometime in 2014 (Correct if I'm mistaken), and I?m not waiting that long. So I have no choice but to pit AMD 8000 vs GTX 700. Generally CGI Developers prefer nVidia over AMD, especially Maya users ? so ideally I?d like to go with GTX. However, the AMD 8000 series upcoming cards might offer better hardware for similarly priced GTX 700 cards. I?m planning to stay around $400 per card, so $800 total for the SLI or Crossfire setup. It?s pretty much going to be GTX 770 2GB ($429) Vs. the comparable Radeon HD 8000 Series card for around $420.
The RTS Games will also be a factor here, so your recommendation needs to be based for both CGI & Gaming.
PS: I have done considerable research on Quadro & FirePro cards and also experienced firsthand; most people agree that Quadro?s & FirePro?s never achieve the same performance for Gaming, and similar CGI Development can be had easily with SLI or Crossfire Video Cards, so I don?t really see any reason to spend $800 for a single Quadro or FirePro.
PSU
This is my only other query. I?ve only used & installed 500W ~ 650W PSU?s, Rosewill or Corsair, and have no further experience with PSU's ? especially powering a Dual-Socket Workstation. I?ve used Power Calculators and the requirement appears to be somewhere between 1000W & 1100W, so I?ll pick up a 1200W PSU ? but I have no idea which one to go for this kind of a machine. The PSU should be able to handle Dual-Xeon and Dual-GPU?s. Any suggestions are welcome.
I think this pretty much covers it all. Please feel free to ask questions and appreciate any advice/suggestions I can get.
Thanks!
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