recently I've installed ZLUDA on my RX 6600 rigs, just done some render on classroom scene and finished at 01:09.53 while on HIP RT it finished at 1:17.90. not as fast as the 3060 but yea decent enough "upgrade"
I just find that to be so funny. I tested Zluda once too. Same result. Nvidia software is even faster on AMD hardware than AMD's own software. Literally just confuses me a little. But yeah, if it works, it works I guess. Just shows how much some additional optimization would benefit AMD GPUs I think.
@@ContradictionDesign yeah hopefully in the future team red would've made their cards better at "productivity" task as great brand competition is always good for us consumer
@@raycw Absolutely. And I know drivers are difficult to develop, but AMD is just so close to being a real threat to Nvidia for productivity. I hope all these big leaks, claiming RDNA5 will be a game changer, are true.
You are life saviour sir,i was stucked on 3060 and 4060,you solved my problem, I'm going to buy 3060 12gb ram for my 3d works in blender,love from india ❤❤❤❤
Hey! I put this build together for you in PCpartpicker. pcpartpicker.com/list/tqC8Fs This build is PC hardware only, does not include windows. Let me know what you think. You can easily adjust certain parts up or down to play with the prices.
Thank you, this really helped; Though I am curious if the new NPU's have have any competition with GPU's in rendering capabilities. As I can't find anywhere testing this, only talks about Ai. I would be happy for any insight.
@@print-HelloWorld-01 hey! Glad it was helpful. The current npus are significantly slower for rendering. They market them by saying they work well for AI, but the only reason your desktop GPU doesn't use the same apps is due to coding. So once copilot and other integrated AI is open to desktop GPUs in the same way, they will smash the npus. For rendering, npus are likely pretty slow still
hi, in 0:42, rtx 3060 is 29 second and rtx 4060ti 16gb is 17.7 second. you mean asus proart rtx 4060ti 16gb right? it means its performance is twice of rtx 3060 12gb right?
My 4060 Ti is the Gigabyte Gaming model. Basically the test shows speed for this exact frame, so you should consider all of the different scenes to make a decision. But yes, the 4060 Ti would be nearly 2x faster in that exact case.
GPU acceleration is a huge speed boost in video editing just like in 3D rendering. I can render 10 minute videos in 1440p60 in a minute or two at most, in Davinci Resolve.
@@ContradictionDesign wow, that GPU is ultimate, so powerful brother. Sorry I ask you many questions, this is last one. Does handbrake software for minimize video size, use GPU 80-100%? Thank you.
In 3D work, the VRAM and speed are not related very much. 16 GB of VRAM will allow a certain size of scene and texture resolutions, and the speed of the GPU is not dependent on VRAM size. The only limitation is that when you run out of VRAM, you won't be able to render at full speed, or maybe not be able to render at all depending on the software. So for the 4060 Ti 16 GB specifically, it definitely can make full use of its VRAM in 3D work, and it will not run slow by any means. It is not like gaming, where the low end GPUs are slow for gaming, but some have high VRAM, like the 7600 XT 16 GB. The VRAM allows you to play in 4K, but the GPU is still a bit too slow for high settings. In 3D work, the higher VRAM is better no matter how fast the GPU is, because it increases the limits of scene complexity. Hopefully this helps, but I realize it may be a confusing answer.
@edgeextrude ok. Maybe I will include both. That way people can sort and add to their copies of the data if they want. I will post it on Patreon (for free obviously) because that's a good safe way to share files until I get a few other things set up.
@@ContradictionDesign it’s funny how little data on modern graphics cards are out there as it applies to 3d rendering and not video editing or gaming. Think you may have the market cornered on this one.
@@Kumar-hg5di Hi! You could try undervolting the GPU to use less power, but this should be done with extreme caution, and is not a good idea for beginners. Undervolting and overclocking are not really worth it for rendering in my opinion. Pushing the GPU to do more often causes instability that is not helpful when you are working on complex scenes.
@@ContradictionDesign ok . And does it consume 170 watt constantly or consume less power while working with simple scene in viewport. If less percentage of gpu is being used,then what electricity it may take near about 100 watt?
@@Kumar-hg5di When you navigate the viewport in solid view mode the GPU will not work very hard. If you turn on render previews, the GPU will run at full speed, because moving the view around is like running a new frame every time. As far as power draw, I might have to test it more. It is not as straightforward as GPU speed, but I could maybe create a new table.
@@ContradictionDesign thank, you sir, one more question should i go with Gigabyte or msi... 3060 Gigabye is most low prise,,then msi,,then Asus is little more costly here.
@@Kumar-hg5di For lower power GPUs the cooler will make less difference than with really hot ones. I really like MSI dual or triple fan GPUs. But you can't go wrong with any of these brands
I super liked this vid, and I think I can use your help in choosing my new gpu. I'm planning to upgrade my gpu, but I'm stuck between RTX 3060 12gb and RTX 4060 8 GB. 3060 has more vram but a lot of people say that 4060 is faster and less power consumption. My type of renders are animations and realistic/complex renders btw.
@@nyorks1549 I would favor VRAM if you use realistic renders. 12 GB gives enough if you know how to optimize your scenes a little. If you use hair curves with hair bsdf shader, you might have a harder time too. That is my biggest VRAM hog
@@ContradictionDesignI'm an architecture student and I'm also stuck between the RTX 3060 12GB and the RTX 4060 8GB. I prefer the 3060 because of its VRAM, which makes it more future-proof. However, most benchmarks indicate that the 4060 is faster. I'm undecided whether to choose slightly slower rendering times but more future-proofing or faster rendering times with potential difficulties handling larger projects.
Keep in mind that exceeding the VRAM forces your GPU to run very very slowly, as it falls back on system RAM. This is a really big performance hit. So in the case of 4060 vs 3060 12 GB, the 12 GB VRAM makes much more sense to me. And it is still only 165 watts, so not much power draw on either of these options.
Hello Sir , Sir i have 550w power supply in my pc and i want to use rtx 4070 super . Should i use external 700w power supply for my graphics card and 550 w for rest of my pc .?
A high quality PSU at 550 watt can safely power the 4070. But you should build your PC on pcpartpicker to see your total draw. As long as your system is under the 550 watts, and the PSU has the right connectors for the GPU, it will work fine.
Any motherboard with Pcie gen 3x8 lane will be plenty fast for a 3060. The speed of the lanes on the motherboard will have very little impact on rendering above that point.
Hello! Thank you, this is very useful. But could you share your render settings? I see that you use OptiX, is it better than CUDA and the other options? What about the rest, what are the values for the most impactful settings?
Optix is faster on Rtx GPUs, but has some limitations. Optix does not allow out of core rendering, meaning that when the VRAM is exceeded, Optix does not work. CUDA allows out of core rendering, but is slower, and does not use VRAM as efficiently. I typically use Optix if possible, with .01 noise limit in the render settings. I limit the samples to 4000, because that is normally plenty. You can use the noise limit without the max samples, but it will run longer for little quality gain. You can use the sample limit without the noise limit as well. For these benchmark tests I run the default scene settings for each blender scene, and just change the render engine for the applicable GPU brand or whatever engine I am testing. Another useful setting for cycles is persistent memory, which keeps frame information cached so future frames are faster to load when starting renders. This can save significant time with animations. One more note about sample count is that it should vary by each scene. It is best to test what a sample frame needs for your ideal quality of final frame. Then test a small batch of frames to see if they look similar when played in sequence. Too much variation will cause the flickering look, which is basically a sign of too little samples calculated prior to denoising. Lots of info, but I hope it is somewhat useful!
@@ContradictionDesign THANK YOUUUU! That's all very interesting to read! I fiddled a bit on my side. Persistent data is magic for rendering performance xD. I also reduce the Max Bounce value, it's one the things that impact rendering time the most. I have reached a speed of 1 fps for my renders. I have a RTX 3060 too. There's just a character moving in my scene. Do you think I could get faster without affecting quality too much?
@@Dante02d12 If you can run final renders at 1 frame every second, there is probably not a ton more to optimize, but I am sure you could. Those render times will get a bit higher with scenery and such, but you already have tools to optimize rendering now, that you didn't before. Quality is relative, and is an artistic choice. As long as the animation is not downright painful to watch, then you get to decide what level of detail or quality you want.
@@ContradictionDesign "Painful" is exactly what I'm trying to avoid xD! Thank you for sharing all this! I usually render stuff in Unreal, but now that I know how to render in Blender, I might switch if I can get the render a bit faster.
We'll the 3070 is quite a bit faster, but like a friend told me, "you can't run out of speed, but you can run out of VRAM." So if you think for any reason you'll need more VRAM then go that way. Viewport performance will be good on either option anyway.
As long as the price is ok for you, do not avoid the 3060 just because they are discontinued. You will still get full warranty on new GPUs. The 3060 is probably a better choice because 8 GB of VRAM (on the 4060) is pretty small nowadays for 3D work.
The 4070 will be better for viewport rendering speed, since modern Blender does not scale well with multiple GPUs. For final renders, the spare 3060 would allow you to continue working on your files while you render. So if final renders are a problem for you all day, then maybe get the 2 3060s. But more than likely the 4070 is the better choice.
Hi, this video is super helpful❤. I am an interior design student who works with software like blender and 3ds max. I don't know whether I should go for the 3060 12gb or 4060ti 16 for my work. Will the 16gb be overkill?. I currently have a gtx1650 laptop but blender starts to crash on smaller interior scenes when vram is exceeded. I can compromise the card for a future upgrade and go with an AM5 board with ddr5, or compromise the CPU and ram and future proofing for the card. What should I do?
Glad it is helpful! I would get the 4060 Ti 16 GB if you can, and shoot for a 6 or 8 core CPU from the newest generations. 16 GB of VRAM will be a bare minimum for many things soon, unless you are very good at optimizing your scenes. Depending on what else you use the PC for, the CPU will not need to be too crazy. If you run simulations, edit a lot of video, or run many apps at a time, 6 or 8 cores will be fine. If you edit video, 8 will be decent but 12 would be great. If you have specific comparisons or more questions let me know!
Świetne kompednium wiedzy odnośnie wydajności kart graficznych, co wybrać - jak na razie najlepsza wydajność do ceny to 4070 super ti. blisko 4090 ale 1/2 ceny. Jeszcze wypadało by zrobić test kiedy v- ram jest przekroczony, jak wtedy sobie radzą karty.
Sup man I have a GTX 1660 super but wanted to upgrade for a while now and I have been thinking of getting the RTX 4070 super but i was wondering which GPU you would recommend for realistic animations in that price range
The 4070 super is very fast and efficient. The VRAM is the only question. If you are creating realistic scenes, you may have trouble with the 12 GB of VRAM. Do you mean realistic texture or realistic everything else too? Dense environments, plants, hair curves, transparent objects like windows, etc. If your scenes use tons of assets, the 4070 super may not have enough VRAM. Let me know which way your scenes lean. If you want to spend a similar amount, a used 3090 might be a slightly better idea, although they are bigger and use more power.
@@ContradictionDesignI hope you have seen game like PUBG. I am interested to make the environment like that.(Not a realistic one but with enough details, trees, vehicles, houses, etc. ) Am I thinking a lot? Would you prefer AMD to make such things? Is 3060 capable of making that?
@@noobzone5291 I play PUBG quite often. Creating a world on game engines takes less resources than you might think, but it would probably be a bit harder to do on the 3060. I am trying to learn unreal engine, and I will know more about the hardware requirements eventually. But I would still say that VRAM will play a large part in the development process. And you might want to preview your world at a larger scale then when playing the game, so it will probably be harder to run the engine than to run the game itself. But I don't have a for sure answer yet. I am definitely still diving in on game design
@@ContradictionDesign I haven't started yet. I am searching for my answers here and there. I left 2 comments here already, 3 including this one. From my research, I found that Vram is essential. 3060 is found at a reasonable price here. Will you give me a GPU list that I should go for? There are many and it is confusing to select. If you give me a list in ascending order, I can select one according to my budget. (No need of an expensive one) Will you do that for me?
@@noobzone5291 Sorry this is so late, but TH-cam does not tell me when I have replies to replies, so I have to search harder to know they are on here. GPUs I would look into, from cheap to midrange: 1. RTX 3060 12 GB. Good amount of VRAM, OK speed, good option for budget scenarios. 2. RTX 4060 Ti 16 GB. This GPU will be considerably faster than the 3060, and has 16 GB VRAM. So it is just all around better. Probably costs 40% more than the 3060. 3. RTX 3090 used. 24 GB VRAM, close to 4070 super in speed, but high power draw and large cooler size. The aftermarket prices will vary wildly by location, but you could end up with a great card for the price of a 4070. 4. RTX 4070 Ti Super. 16 GB VRAM, much faster than 3090, and fairly efficient power wise. This is definitely high end of the price range, but still kind of reasonable compared to prior generations for what you get. Again, AMD will not be your best bet for certain programs, so unless you know for sure all of your softwares have AMD support, then avoid them.
@@AliRaza-i4s7l well for ray tracing or realistic rendering, the 3060 is best. For gaming without any rt, these two are probably closer together. What kind of use are you wanting to do?
I m actually rendering in houdini karma xpu . I have 3 gpu in my mind - 3060,3060ti,4060 . which one should i pick ( also double graphic card is good ?)
The 4060 has more features for AV1 encoding if you video edit. Otherwise, the 3060 is great for 12 GB VRAM at a lower price. So if your scenes are normally bigger then the 3060 may be better. Multi GPU is OK, but it is not well optimized for Blender. The only way to get full speed on multiple GPUs in Blender is to run separate instances of Blender and use one GPU on each instance to render separate frames. Enabling two gpus in one scene will not fully use both GPUs. The one advantage is that you can continue to work on GPU0 while GPU1 renders a different scene. But running two instances of Blender also uses more system RAM by quite a bit. So you will need more than 32 GB of RAM more than likely. This is a lot of info, so let me know if you have more questions!
@@Xayisnub Hey! Sorry I just saw this now. The 4060 will be slightly faster at ray traced rendering, but the 8 GB of VRAM will be a problem. 12 GB or more can be fine with reasonable sized textures and such. You can always use CUDA for final renders, and Blender will let the system RAM store anything the VRAM won't fit. This is slower than GPU rendering alone, but it is much faster than CPU rendering. So that is an option for the times you need to render, which could be done over a few nights while you sleep.
Thanks for the effort you put in this video , I also have rtx 3060 12GB version but i got slower times than yours for example i got 411 sec in lone monk and you got 357 also the barber scene i got 147 sec and you got 128 what could be wrong ? i rendered all the scenes multiple times to make sure.
What motherboard and CPU are you running? I have found some non-zero speed differences due to Pcie generation. I run my benchmarks on an X570 system with 5950x, so Pcie4.0x16 slot is fully available to the GPU.
Hi, if you use two RTX 3060 setup in one PC, would that actually make it have 24GB of VRAM? like, would you be able to use all the 24GB of VRAM? in 3D work or even in other scenarios that require more VRAM, or not really, also would the same apply if I have a 3060 and then add a 4060 ti for example in a chipset with two or more PCI x16 ports for example, like would the VRAM increase if I add another GPU?
@@axelzens7033 hey! VRAM does not add in Blender. The only exception is using nvlink which only works with a physical bridge connector and certain GPUs, like 2080 ti, 3090, etc. If you run two GPUs in one PC with the same blender file open, your scene will be limited to the smallest of the two. If you run one separate instance of blender for each GPU, they each get their full VRAM size per each GPU. So you'd have 12 on one instance and 16 on the other instance separate from each other.
@@ContradictionDesign Yeah apearently multiple GPU setups, with NVMI require more things, and it can become a hassle to set it up correctly, I was planning to get a setup with a 3060 with a better chipset/board(2 PCI x16 slots and a 750 W or more PSU) just so I can and another 3060 later to upgrade, but as you said, multi GPUS setups require certain GPUs, and these setups are way too expensive(1500 W PSU or more, different chipset, better cooling system, the right dimensions for the NVLINK connector, etc.) So maybe I should just buy the setup with the 3060 and replace the GPU later with a 3090 or the 4090 to get 24 VRAM , I want to use it for 3D works, AI, ML and later animation Thanks for your reply, if you have any recommendations for a PC setup for a $750 to $1000 setup for 3D work, AI/ML and animation let me know, and again, thanks
@@axelzens7033 I would say go with a decent machine with a cheap 3060 for now, and upgrade it later when you can. That is a good idea. Your CPU and RAM will be good to go for many years before you would need to upgrade them just to run future software. So the GPU can just be updated for years without other costs. I sent a build link to someone on here the other day. Let me go find it, and post it here. $1000 is tricky for heavy 3D work, but people do this work with much worse machines. I will send that link in a moment.
@@axelzens7033 Here is a build at $1K. It is AM4 AMD platform, so a little older but definitely good hardware. Note that the motherboard may need a bios update, so if you know how to do that you would be golden. Build: pcpartpicker.com/list/gytFJy LMK if you have questions!
Is there a difference in card performance when rendering in blender versions 3.6 and 4.1? And if so, why ? And I'm glad I found your channel! Regards !
Hey thanks! There are very minor differences between 3.6 and 4.1. I would say they are more likely testing error instead of actual changes. There were no render engine updates in 4.0+ so far.
@@KhalidEnterprise I would say 3060. 8 GB is really small for anything complex. My characters use up to 16 GB each alone. The 3060 may be just slightly slower but probably worth it. Keep in mind that for games, DLSS 3.5 is much faster on the 40 series, in case you use it for that too. Might change the convo little
@@ContradictionDesign this is exactly the question I've been searching for, and your answer kinda solidifies my decision. I watched a few videos comparing 3060 and 4060, and gaming wise, 3060 is also better. 4060 got bottlenecked on their vram too many times, it's kinda funny
The 4060 is probably slightly faster than the 3060, so you can use that for a comparison against the 6700 XT. If I remember right, the 3060 beats the 6700 XT in rendering speed. So the 4060 should too. I would think about how much VRAM you need. If 8 GB is enough for you, then the 4060 is probably the better choice
Hai, i have i5 12400f, msi h610 ddr5, 16gd ram and 512 gb ssd, so can you tell me msi 3060 12gb is enough for learning part, working and creating videos, in blender and also PSU.
RTX 3060 is a good starter GPU, with a decent amount of VRAM for a kind of low price. The RTX 3060 is not super fast though, so final renders of animations that are more than a few seconds long will take a long time. This is fine if you can let it run overnight or are just learning. If you get further into Blender, you might need more VRAM eventually, but you can always trade your GPU out for a faster one in the future. As far as power supplies, you will only need a small one with this build. 550 Watt would be enough. I would recommend a 650 Gold or higher personally, because they are not much more expensive, but are more efficient. What PSU brands are you considering? I have used a ton of corsair and EVGA PSUs in the past. I know people also like seasonic, but I have not had one. Really MSI, ASUS, and other major brands will be fine. The PSU is NOT the place to go cheap to save a few bucks though. Let me know if you have more questions!
@@PVREntertainments2022 I would say the 3060 is a good value. The 4060 Ti 16 GB has extra VRAM and some extra features, but it costs quite a bit more. If the RTX 4070 fits your budget, it is much faster than the 3060. What is your GPU price limit? I can be more helpful with more info.
@@PVREntertainments2022 Those would be good choices so you don't have to upgrade them later for a larger power draw GPU someday down the road. PSU should go 10+ years, and most of them have 10 year warranties.
@@ContradictionDesign thanks for replying. well there are also 4060 and many latest cards, but they have less VRAM and they are costly too. the price of 3060 is decreased, so thinking of buying it. but have doubt how much it will handle all the 3d animation works.
@@sgdigital2026 well all it does is handle the rendering for the most part, so you really just need to consider time for rendering. It will do just fine with scenes up to 12 GB VRAM use. But your GPU won't impact the animation work itself, so don't worry about that part.
@@ContradictionDesign ok got your point. so with 3060 i can play games and do the 3d design works both smoothly right!? out of 10, what will be ur rating for 3060?
@@sgdigital2026 For 1080p gaming it will be great. 3D rendering with complex scenes will work ok, but take a little longer. Low power draw and noise while using it hard. I would rate it at 8/10. It's a good budget GPU. You can always render over night, so the slower GPU won't even matter as much. The PC hardware makers are very good at selling us the next, new things, but almost nobody actually needs them right when they come out. The 3060 can serve you well as long as you keep in mind it is a budget model. Someday you can trade it up if you really need to.
Bro, if I have RTX 3060 Ti. which better do i buy Intel core i5 12400 or intel core i5 12400f. For blender and unity purposes. (I'm kinda overwhelmed with Both gpu make BIG difference or not). Thanks.
Either of those CPUs will work the same basically. In basically all applications, you will use your 3060 ti and not any iGPU on the CPU. So the choice just comes down to price or performance at that point, but you could use the f model just fine!
@@IamShashi98 Intel K models are unlocked for overclocking, KF models are unlocked but do NOT have integrated graphics (hence the slight discount). Models without K or KF are locked for overclocking, and may have slightly lower power design. So the KF and K versions will perform similar to each other for 3D and video editing. If you have a discrete GPU, get the KF model for the discount. If you will not have a discrete GPU, then you will have to get the K model. I would definitely edit video and render 3D on a discrete GPU with KF CPU, if I was building a system with Intel. Let me know if you have more questions!
Hello Sir, really enjoyed your informative content .Thank you for that . *I have a question please guide me right buying choice . I have amd 5 5600 g Should i buy rtx 4070 super or rtx 4060 ti Please sir help me buying a right gpu if any other also. Thankyou
The 4070 and 4060 ti are both good options for 3d and they will both work well with the 5600g. So you have a speed drop to gain 4 GB of VRAM. It is up to you if you want the extra VRAM or not basically.
Respected Sir, Sorry to bother you, But i don't understand what this means, when you said: So You have a speed drop to gain 4gb vram.It is upto you if you want the extra vram or not basically... *would these card support my 3d animation work without bottleneck
Looks like a solid build to me. 8 cores is better for 3D work than 6, but either will do well. The hyper 212 is fantastic, and I pick Corsair cases every time I build a PC for a friend. Enjoy it!
@@ContradictionDesign Aaaaahhhh, this reply feels like a stress reliever for me! 😊🥰 Thanks a lot, brother. And now I have an another little confusion on different models😇 (Gigabyte 3060 Eagle, Eagle OC, Windforce OC, etc.). Which one is the best?
@@Macro_Station The OC models and 3 fan models will be slightly faster and are a little quieter, but I would not worry about it. The upgrades in the cooler are rarely worth it vs the massive price difference between them. So whatever fits in your case and your budget is best. I have plenty of tiny zotac Rtx 4070 that run just fine mining crypto 24/7 for months on end. My big MSI triple fan models run at the same speed, and are slightly warmer.
@@AndyTanguay Which is decent! I would like to throw 6 of them in a DL580 server and see how that does. My current servers don't support GPUs very well, and these dell PCs only do one midsize or two small GPUs. But honestly one 4090 beats an army of 3060, so that probably makes the most sense.
recently I've installed ZLUDA on my RX 6600 rigs, just done some render on classroom scene and finished at 01:09.53 while on HIP RT it finished at 1:17.90. not as fast as the 3060 but yea decent enough "upgrade"
I just find that to be so funny. I tested Zluda once too. Same result. Nvidia software is even faster on AMD hardware than AMD's own software. Literally just confuses me a little. But yeah, if it works, it works I guess. Just shows how much some additional optimization would benefit AMD GPUs I think.
@@ContradictionDesign yeah hopefully in the future team red would've made their cards better at "productivity" task as great brand competition is always good for us consumer
@@raycw Absolutely. And I know drivers are difficult to develop, but AMD is just so close to being a real threat to Nvidia for productivity. I hope all these big leaks, claiming RDNA5 will be a game changer, are true.
You are life saviour sir,i was stucked on 3060 and 4060,you solved my problem, I'm going to buy 3060 12gb ram for my 3d works in blender,love from india ❤❤❤❤
@@BhondvaThem you are welcome! Glad it was helpful!
Me bhi stuck hoon yr , are you bought 3060? i'm confused in 3060 vs 4060 ,
@@saktboyyt8982 RTX 3060 is a better value because of the 12 GB VRAM.
I want/need to start sculpting in Blender (3D models for characters). Which build you can suggest with a budget of 1500/1600 $?
Hey! I put this build together for you in PCpartpicker. pcpartpicker.com/list/tqC8Fs
This build is PC hardware only, does not include windows. Let me know what you think. You can easily adjust certain parts up or down to play with the prices.
glad i got this card, hope it run well for blender octane
Oh it will run great! Nice and quiet too.
@@ContradictionDesign already got it, yes its run amazing
@@vinderesual Good to hear!
Thank you, this really helped; Though I am curious if the new NPU's have have any competition with GPU's in rendering capabilities. As I can't find anywhere testing this, only talks about Ai. I would be happy for any insight.
@@print-HelloWorld-01 hey! Glad it was helpful. The current npus are significantly slower for rendering. They market them by saying they work well for AI, but the only reason your desktop GPU doesn't use the same apps is due to coding. So once copilot and other integrated AI is open to desktop GPUs in the same way, they will smash the npus. For rendering, npus are likely pretty slow still
hi, in 0:42, rtx 3060 is 29 second and rtx 4060ti 16gb is 17.7 second.
you mean asus proart rtx 4060ti 16gb right? it means its performance is twice of rtx 3060 12gb right?
My 4060 Ti is the Gigabyte Gaming model. Basically the test shows speed for this exact frame, so you should consider all of the different scenes to make a decision. But yes, the 4060 Ti would be nearly 2x faster in that exact case.
hi again, i want gpu for render export in premier pro. is gpu make render time 1/2 or 1/3? are the result like this in blender?
GPU acceleration is a huge speed boost in video editing just like in 3D rendering. I can render 10 minute videos in 1440p60 in a minute or two at most, in Davinci Resolve.
@@ContradictionDesign very good, what GPU model you use for this time render 😧?
@@user-fo9ce3hr5h Rtx 4090
@@ContradictionDesign wow, that GPU is ultimate, so powerful brother.
Sorry I ask you many questions, this is last one. Does handbrake software for minimize video size, use GPU 80-100%? Thank you.
@@user-fo9ce3hr5h Hey no problem! I am here to help people. I have not used handbrake myself, so I can't answer that one unfortunately.
How do i perform these tests? Is there are files i should search on google?
These scenes, and many other things are available for free at:
www.blender.org/download/demo-files/
They are from Blender's website itself.
Do you think the 4060 ti have enough speed to use the entire 16gb vram? Especially when working in 3D scenes/character/vfx.
In 3D work, the VRAM and speed are not related very much. 16 GB of VRAM will allow a certain size of scene and texture resolutions, and the speed of the GPU is not dependent on VRAM size. The only limitation is that when you run out of VRAM, you won't be able to render at full speed, or maybe not be able to render at all depending on the software. So for the 4060 Ti 16 GB specifically, it definitely can make full use of its VRAM in 3D work, and it will not run slow by any means. It is not like gaming, where the low end GPUs are slow for gaming, but some have high VRAM, like the 7600 XT 16 GB. The VRAM allows you to play in 4K, but the GPU is still a bit too slow for high settings. In 3D work, the higher VRAM is better no matter how fast the GPU is, because it increases the limits of scene complexity.
Hopefully this helps, but I realize it may be a confusing answer.
This is so helpful! Thank you so much! Is the spreadsheet downloadable anywhere, just curious. Ty again!
@@edgeextrude you are welcome, and I still need to post it. Would it be better as a PDF or a writable spreadsheet?
@@ContradictionDesign whatever is more convenient for you. Personally, a pdf would work for me.
@edgeextrude ok. Maybe I will include both. That way people can sort and add to their copies of the data if they want. I will post it on Patreon (for free obviously) because that's a good safe way to share files until I get a few other things set up.
@@ContradictionDesign it’s funny how little data on modern graphics cards are out there as it applies to 3d rendering and not video editing or gaming. Think you may have the market cornered on this one.
@edgeextrude I think so too. But I should really post more than I have been
How to reduce power consumption by 3060? What is overclocked, does it used in rendering here,
@@Kumar-hg5di Hi! You could try undervolting the GPU to use less power, but this should be done with extreme caution, and is not a good idea for beginners. Undervolting and overclocking are not really worth it for rendering in my opinion. Pushing the GPU to do more often causes instability that is not helpful when you are working on complex scenes.
@@ContradictionDesign ok . And does it consume 170 watt constantly or consume less power while working with simple scene in viewport. If less percentage of gpu is being used,then what electricity it may take near about 100 watt?
@@Kumar-hg5di When you navigate the viewport in solid view mode the GPU will not work very hard. If you turn on render previews, the GPU will run at full speed, because moving the view around is like running a new frame every time.
As far as power draw, I might have to test it more. It is not as straightforward as GPU speed, but I could maybe create a new table.
@@ContradictionDesign thank, you sir, one more question should i go with Gigabyte or msi... 3060
Gigabye is most low prise,,then msi,,then Asus is little more costly here.
@@Kumar-hg5di For lower power GPUs the cooler will make less difference than with really hot ones. I really like MSI dual or triple fan GPUs. But you can't go wrong with any of these brands
I super liked this vid, and I think I can use your help in choosing my new gpu. I'm planning to upgrade my gpu, but I'm stuck between RTX 3060 12gb and RTX 4060 8 GB. 3060 has more vram but a lot of people say that 4060 is faster and less power consumption. My type of renders are animations and realistic/complex renders btw.
@@nyorks1549 I would favor VRAM if you use realistic renders. 12 GB gives enough if you know how to optimize your scenes a little. If you use hair curves with hair bsdf shader, you might have a harder time too. That is my biggest VRAM hog
Same problem
@@ContradictionDesignI'm an architecture student and I'm also stuck between the RTX 3060 12GB and the RTX 4060 8GB. I prefer the 3060 because of its VRAM, which makes it more future-proof. However, most benchmarks indicate that the 4060 is faster. I'm undecided whether to choose slightly slower rendering times but more future-proofing or faster rendering times with potential difficulties handling larger projects.
Keep in mind that exceeding the VRAM forces your GPU to run very very slowly, as it falls back on system RAM. This is a really big performance hit. So in the case of 4060 vs 3060 12 GB, the 12 GB VRAM makes much more sense to me. And it is still only 165 watts, so not much power draw on either of these options.
Is it normal that the 3060 takes long time to render animations in cycles? A 5 second animation took like one hour to render
Hello Sir ,
Sir i have 550w power supply in my pc and i want to use rtx 4070 super . Should i use external 700w power supply for my graphics card and 550 w for rest of my pc .?
A high quality PSU at 550 watt can safely power the 4070. But you should build your PC on pcpartpicker to see your total draw. As long as your system is under the 550 watts, and the PSU has the right connectors for the GPU, it will work fine.
Thank you again sir ,😊
what are the other Specs like the CPU, RAM and Motherboard of your PC so i can compare my GPU performance accordingly
The test bench is: AMD R9 5950X, 64 GB DDR4 3600 RAM, Gigabyte X570 Aorus Ultra motherboard. GPUs are run at Pcie 4.0x16 speed for single GPU tests.
What would be a good motherboard for the 3060? I have it too but it takes too long to render..
Any motherboard with Pcie gen 3x8 lane will be plenty fast for a 3060. The speed of the lanes on the motherboard will have very little impact on rendering above that point.
@@ContradictionDesign Oh alright, thanks a lot :)
@@jensworld444 not a problem!
Hello! Thank you, this is very useful.
But could you share your render settings? I see that you use OptiX, is it better than CUDA and the other options? What about the rest, what are the values for the most impactful settings?
Optix is faster on Rtx GPUs, but has some limitations. Optix does not allow out of core rendering, meaning that when the VRAM is exceeded, Optix does not work.
CUDA allows out of core rendering, but is slower, and does not use VRAM as efficiently.
I typically use Optix if possible, with .01 noise limit in the render settings. I limit the samples to 4000, because that is normally plenty.
You can use the noise limit without the max samples, but it will run longer for little quality gain.
You can use the sample limit without the noise limit as well.
For these benchmark tests I run the default scene settings for each blender scene, and just change the render engine for the applicable GPU brand or whatever engine I am testing.
Another useful setting for cycles is persistent memory, which keeps frame information cached so future frames are faster to load when starting renders. This can save significant time with animations.
One more note about sample count is that it should vary by each scene. It is best to test what a sample frame needs for your ideal quality of final frame. Then test a small batch of frames to see if they look similar when played in sequence. Too much variation will cause the flickering look, which is basically a sign of too little samples calculated prior to denoising.
Lots of info, but I hope it is somewhat useful!
@@ContradictionDesign THANK YOUUUU! That's all very interesting to read!
I fiddled a bit on my side. Persistent data is magic for rendering performance xD.
I also reduce the Max Bounce value, it's one the things that impact rendering time the most.
I have reached a speed of 1 fps for my renders. I have a RTX 3060 too. There's just a character moving in my scene. Do you think I could get faster without affecting quality too much?
@@Dante02d12 If you can run final renders at 1 frame every second, there is probably not a ton more to optimize, but I am sure you could.
Those render times will get a bit higher with scenery and such, but you already have tools to optimize rendering now, that you didn't before.
Quality is relative, and is an artistic choice. As long as the animation is not downright painful to watch, then you get to decide what level of detail or quality you want.
@@ContradictionDesign "Painful" is exactly what I'm trying to avoid xD!
Thank you for sharing all this! I usually render stuff in Unreal, but now that I know how to render in Blender, I might switch if I can get the render a bit faster.
@Dante02d12 Awesome! Glad I could help! I need to start building environments in unreal engine, so that will be interesting to do some rendering with.
3060 (12gb) or 3070 (8gb) for blender, D5 Render, lumion?
We'll the 3070 is quite a bit faster, but like a friend told me, "you can't run out of speed, but you can run out of VRAM." So if you think for any reason you'll need more VRAM then go that way. Viewport performance will be good on either option anyway.
@ContradictionDesign thank u so much! 😊
@@santii12 you are welcome!
Hi , good benchmarks.. where to download these benchmark files..? Like the classroom setup... ? I need to benchmark my 4070 super
Hey! Here are the files, along with lot's of other good stuff:
www.blender.org/download/demo-files/
Thanks for watching!
@@ContradictionDesign Many thanks :)
Hey would you suggest to get a 3060 as it is discontinued by nvidia or should i go with rtx 4060
As long as the price is ok for you, do not avoid the 3060 just because they are discontinued. You will still get full warranty on new GPUs. The 3060 is probably a better choice because 8 GB of VRAM (on the 4060) is pretty small nowadays for 3D work.
Do you think getting 2 rtx 3060 is better than a rtx 4070 for 3d modelling and rendering ?
The 4070 will be better for viewport rendering speed, since modern Blender does not scale well with multiple GPUs. For final renders, the spare 3060 would allow you to continue working on your files while you render. So if final renders are a problem for you all day, then maybe get the 2 3060s. But more than likely the 4070 is the better choice.
Hi, this video is super helpful❤. I am an interior design student who works with software like blender and 3ds max. I don't know whether I should go for the 3060 12gb or 4060ti 16 for my work. Will the 16gb be overkill?. I currently have a gtx1650 laptop but blender starts to crash on smaller interior scenes when vram is exceeded. I can compromise the card for a future upgrade and go with an AM5 board with ddr5, or compromise the CPU and ram and future proofing for the card. What should I do?
Glad it is helpful! I would get the 4060 Ti 16 GB if you can, and shoot for a 6 or 8 core CPU from the newest generations. 16 GB of VRAM will be a bare minimum for many things soon, unless you are very good at optimizing your scenes.
Depending on what else you use the PC for, the CPU will not need to be too crazy. If you run simulations, edit a lot of video, or run many apps at a time, 6 or 8 cores will be fine. If you edit video, 8 will be decent but 12 would be great.
If you have specific comparisons or more questions let me know!
@@ContradictionDesignthnx man
Świetne kompednium wiedzy odnośnie wydajności kart graficznych, co wybrać - jak na razie najlepsza wydajność do ceny to 4070 super ti. blisko 4090 ale 1/2 ceny. Jeszcze wypadało by zrobić test kiedy v- ram jest przekroczony, jak wtedy sobie radzą karty.
Thank you for your comment! The RTX 4070 Ti Super is very fast!
That is a good idea. I might just use that! Thank you
@@ContradictionDesign kupiłem 4070 super , czas Scanlands scene (st Michale ) 40; 41s
2x xeon E5-2687W + 80gb ddr3 1333 ;( ram jest słaby.
@@merkhava Awesome! Thanks for the data. I hope you are enjoying the new GPU!
@@ContradictionDesign wydajność nowego gpu jest niesamowita, teraz praca w blender jest wyraźnie przyjemniejsza, lepszy podgląd na żywo.
@@merkhava That is great!
Sup man I have a GTX 1660 super but wanted to upgrade for a while now and I have been thinking of getting the RTX 4070 super but i was wondering which GPU you would recommend for realistic animations in that price range
The 4070 super is very fast and efficient. The VRAM is the only question. If you are creating realistic scenes, you may have trouble with the 12 GB of VRAM. Do you mean realistic texture or realistic everything else too? Dense environments, plants, hair curves, transparent objects like windows, etc. If your scenes use tons of assets, the 4070 super may not have enough VRAM.
Let me know which way your scenes lean. If you want to spend a similar amount, a used 3090 might be a slightly better idea, although they are bigger and use more power.
@@ContradictionDesignI hope you have seen game like PUBG. I am interested to make the environment like that.(Not a realistic one but with enough details, trees, vehicles, houses, etc. )
Am I thinking a lot? Would you prefer AMD to make such things? Is 3060 capable of making that?
@@noobzone5291 I play PUBG quite often. Creating a world on game engines takes less resources than you might think, but it would probably be a bit harder to do on the 3060.
I am trying to learn unreal engine, and I will know more about the hardware requirements eventually. But I would still say that VRAM will play a large part in the development process. And you might want to preview your world at a larger scale then when playing the game, so it will probably be harder to run the engine than to run the game itself.
But I don't have a for sure answer yet. I am definitely still diving in on game design
@@ContradictionDesign I haven't started yet. I am searching for my answers here and there. I left 2 comments here already, 3 including this one.
From my research, I found that Vram is essential. 3060 is found at a reasonable price here.
Will you give me a GPU list that I should go for? There are many and it is confusing to select. If you give me a list in ascending order, I can select one according to my budget. (No need of an expensive one) Will you do that for me?
@@noobzone5291 Sorry this is so late, but TH-cam does not tell me when I have replies to replies, so I have to search harder to know they are on here.
GPUs I would look into, from cheap to midrange:
1. RTX 3060 12 GB. Good amount of VRAM, OK speed, good option for budget scenarios.
2. RTX 4060 Ti 16 GB. This GPU will be considerably faster than the 3060, and has 16 GB VRAM. So it is just all around better. Probably costs 40% more than the 3060.
3. RTX 3090 used. 24 GB VRAM, close to 4070 super in speed, but high power draw and large cooler size. The aftermarket prices will vary wildly by location, but you could end up with a great card for the price of a 4070.
4. RTX 4070 Ti Super. 16 GB VRAM, much faster than 3090, and fairly efficient power wise. This is definitely high end of the price range, but still kind of reasonable compared to prior generations for what you get.
Again, AMD will not be your best bet for certain programs, so unless you know for sure all of your softwares have AMD support, then avoid them.
For heavy task which is best Gtx 1080ti vs Rtx 3060
@@AliRaza-i4s7l well for ray tracing or realistic rendering, the 3060 is best. For gaming without any rt, these two are probably closer together. What kind of use are you wanting to do?
I m actually rendering in houdini karma xpu . I have 3 gpu in my mind - 3060,3060ti,4060 . which one should i pick ( also double graphic card is good ?)
The 4060 has more features for AV1 encoding if you video edit. Otherwise, the 3060 is great for 12 GB VRAM at a lower price. So if your scenes are normally bigger then the 3060 may be better.
Multi GPU is OK, but it is not well optimized for Blender. The only way to get full speed on multiple GPUs in Blender is to run separate instances of Blender and use one GPU on each instance to render separate frames. Enabling two gpus in one scene will not fully use both GPUs.
The one advantage is that you can continue to work on GPU0 while GPU1 renders a different scene.
But running two instances of Blender also uses more system RAM by quite a bit. So you will need more than 32 GB of RAM more than likely.
This is a lot of info, so let me know if you have more questions!
@@ContradictionDesign I wanna make 15-20 second animations 4k ....would the 4060 (8gb) be better than the rtx 3060 (12gb) ?
@@Xayisnub Hey! Sorry I just saw this now. The 4060 will be slightly faster at ray traced rendering, but the 8 GB of VRAM will be a problem. 12 GB or more can be fine with reasonable sized textures and such.
You can always use CUDA for final renders, and Blender will let the system RAM store anything the VRAM won't fit. This is slower than GPU rendering alone, but it is much faster than CPU rendering. So that is an option for the times you need to render, which could be done over a few nights while you sleep.
@@ContradictionDesign hi I just started learning blender. Can i use 3060 for this?
Absolutely the RTX 3060 will work well for it's price point. (Sorry for super late reply)
i'm from india , can u suggest me Rtx 3060 or rtx 4060 which will gives me better performance in blender.
Hi! I think the 4060 might be a little faster, but the 12 GB on the 3060 is probably more important for most people. 3D work can take a lot of VRAM.
Thanks for the effort you put in this video , I also have rtx 3060 12GB version
but i got slower times than yours
for example i got 411 sec in lone monk and you got 357
also the barber scene i got 147 sec and you got 128
what could be wrong ?
i rendered all the scenes multiple times to make sure.
What motherboard and CPU are you running? I have found some non-zero speed differences due to Pcie generation. I run my benchmarks on an X570 system with 5950x, so Pcie4.0x16 slot is fully available to the GPU.
Hi, if you use two RTX 3060 setup in one PC, would that actually make it have 24GB of VRAM? like, would you be able to use all the 24GB of VRAM? in 3D work or even in other scenarios that require more VRAM, or not really, also would the same apply if I have a 3060 and then add a 4060 ti for example in a chipset with two or more PCI x16 ports for example, like would the VRAM increase if I add another GPU?
@@axelzens7033 hey! VRAM does not add in Blender. The only exception is using nvlink which only works with a physical bridge connector and certain GPUs, like 2080 ti, 3090, etc.
If you run two GPUs in one PC with the same blender file open, your scene will be limited to the smallest of the two. If you run one separate instance of blender for each GPU, they each get their full VRAM size per each GPU. So you'd have 12 on one instance and 16 on the other instance separate from each other.
@@ContradictionDesign Yeah apearently multiple GPU setups, with NVMI require more things, and it can become a hassle to set it up correctly, I was planning to get a setup with a 3060 with a better chipset/board(2 PCI x16 slots and a 750 W or more PSU) just so I can and another 3060 later to upgrade, but as you said, multi GPUS setups require certain GPUs, and these setups are way too expensive(1500 W PSU or more, different chipset, better cooling system, the right dimensions for the NVLINK connector, etc.)
So maybe I should just buy the setup with the 3060 and replace the GPU later with a 3090 or the 4090 to get 24 VRAM , I want to use it for 3D works, AI, ML and later animation
Thanks for your reply, if you have any recommendations for a PC setup for a $750 to $1000 setup for 3D work, AI/ML and animation let me know, and again, thanks
@@axelzens7033 I would say go with a decent machine with a cheap 3060 for now, and upgrade it later when you can. That is a good idea. Your CPU and RAM will be good to go for many years before you would need to upgrade them just to run future software. So the GPU can just be updated for years without other costs.
I sent a build link to someone on here the other day. Let me go find it, and post it here. $1000 is tricky for heavy 3D work, but people do this work with much worse machines. I will send that link in a moment.
@@axelzens7033 Here is a build at $1K. It is AM4 AMD platform, so a little older but definitely good hardware. Note that the motherboard may need a bios update, so if you know how to do that you would be golden.
Build:
pcpartpicker.com/list/gytFJy
LMK if you have questions!
Is there a difference in card performance when rendering in blender versions 3.6 and 4.1? And if so, why ? And I'm glad I found your channel! Regards !
Hey thanks! There are very minor differences between 3.6 and 4.1. I would say they are more likely testing error instead of actual changes. There were no render engine updates in 4.0+ so far.
3060(12GB) or 4060(8GB) for blender?
@@KhalidEnterprise I would say 3060. 8 GB is really small for anything complex. My characters use up to 16 GB each alone. The 3060 may be just slightly slower but probably worth it.
Keep in mind that for games, DLSS 3.5 is much faster on the 40 series, in case you use it for that too. Might change the convo little
@@ContradictionDesign this is exactly the question I've been searching for, and your answer kinda solidifies my decision. I watched a few videos comparing 3060 and 4060, and gaming wise, 3060 is also better. 4060 got bottlenecked on their vram too many times, it's kinda funny
@@chompionssawelo3507 Yeah 8 GB is too small now unless you want to live with some bad compromises. For games and 3D work this is the case.
@@ContradictionDesign That's true, I even had a question (RTX 3060 (12GB) or RTX 4060 TI (16GB) for rendering?)
@@nostalgiccassette3595 4060 Ti 16 GB will be much better overall. It is a bit faster, and the VRAM is great.
How's the performance of buying 4060? I'm having a 2nd thought between rx 6700 xt and 4060
The 4060 is probably slightly faster than the 3060, so you can use that for a comparison against the 6700 XT. If I remember right, the 3060 beats the 6700 XT in rendering speed. So the 4060 should too. I would think about how much VRAM you need. If 8 GB is enough for you, then the 4060 is probably the better choice
Hai, i have i5 12400f, msi h610 ddr5, 16gd ram and 512 gb ssd, so can you tell me msi 3060 12gb is enough for learning part, working and creating videos, in blender and also PSU.
RTX 3060 is a good starter GPU, with a decent amount of VRAM for a kind of low price. The RTX 3060 is not super fast though, so final renders of animations that are more than a few seconds long will take a long time. This is fine if you can let it run overnight or are just learning.
If you get further into Blender, you might need more VRAM eventually, but you can always trade your GPU out for a faster one in the future.
As far as power supplies, you will only need a small one with this build. 550 Watt would be enough. I would recommend a 650 Gold or higher personally, because they are not much more expensive, but are more efficient.
What PSU brands are you considering? I have used a ton of corsair and EVGA PSUs in the past. I know people also like seasonic, but I have not had one. Really MSI, ASUS, and other major brands will be fine. The PSU is NOT the place to go cheap to save a few bucks though.
Let me know if you have more questions!
Suggest, which GPU is better for blender all works and also creating videos in budget friendly.
PSU msi or corsair 750/850w is k,.!
@@PVREntertainments2022 I would say the 3060 is a good value. The 4060 Ti 16 GB has extra VRAM and some extra features, but it costs quite a bit more. If the RTX 4070 fits your budget, it is much faster than the 3060. What is your GPU price limit? I can be more helpful with more info.
@@PVREntertainments2022 Those would be good choices so you don't have to upgrade them later for a larger power draw GPU someday down the road. PSU should go 10+ years, and most of them have 10 year warranties.
i have core i7 12th generation, with 16gb ddr5 and a gigabyte motherboard. should i buy rtx 3060 for maya, blender and etc 3d softwRe?
The RTX 3060 is a decent, lower power GPU for 3D work. 12 GB VRAM is decent for starters too.
@@ContradictionDesign thanks for replying. well there are also 4060 and many latest cards, but they have less VRAM and they are costly too. the price of 3060 is decreased, so thinking of buying it. but have doubt how much it will handle all the 3d animation works.
@@sgdigital2026 well all it does is handle the rendering for the most part, so you really just need to consider time for rendering. It will do just fine with scenes up to 12 GB VRAM use. But your GPU won't impact the animation work itself, so don't worry about that part.
@@ContradictionDesign ok got your point. so with 3060 i can play games and do the 3d design works both smoothly right!? out of 10, what will be ur rating for 3060?
@@sgdigital2026 For 1080p gaming it will be great. 3D rendering with complex scenes will work ok, but take a little longer. Low power draw and noise while using it hard. I would rate it at 8/10. It's a good budget GPU. You can always render over night, so the slower GPU won't even matter as much.
The PC hardware makers are very good at selling us the next, new things, but almost nobody actually needs them right when they come out.
The 3060 can serve you well as long as you keep in mind it is a budget model. Someday you can trade it up if you really need to.
Dude, why there is 2 4070 result? Which is correct?
The faster results are on the test bench and it has better pcie bandwidth. I will add some extra details to clear it up
Bro, if I have RTX 3060 Ti.
which better do i buy Intel core i5 12400 or intel core i5 12400f.
For blender and unity purposes.
(I'm kinda overwhelmed with Both gpu make BIG difference or not).
Thanks.
Either of those CPUs will work the same basically. In basically all applications, you will use your 3060 ti and not any iGPU on the CPU. So the choice just comes down to price or performance at that point, but you could use the f model just fine!
@@ContradictionDesign thanks.
@@ContradictionDesignk kf and normal cpus , which is best I mean 12000k 12000kf 12000 which is best for 3D and video editing
@@IamShashi98 Intel K models are unlocked for overclocking, KF models are unlocked but do NOT have integrated graphics (hence the slight discount).
Models without K or KF are locked for overclocking, and may have slightly lower power design. So the KF and K versions will perform similar to each other for 3D and video editing.
If you have a discrete GPU, get the KF model for the discount. If you will not have a discrete GPU, then you will have to get the K model.
I would definitely edit video and render 3D on a discrete GPU with KF CPU, if I was building a system with Intel.
Let me know if you have more questions!
Hello Sir, really enjoyed your informative content .Thank you for that .
*I have a question please guide me right buying choice .
I have amd 5 5600 g
Should i buy rtx 4070 super or rtx 4060 ti
Please sir help me buying a right gpu if any other also.
Thankyou
The 4070 and 4060 ti are both good options for 3d and they will both work well with the 5600g. So you have a speed drop to gain 4 GB of VRAM. It is up to you if you want the extra VRAM or not basically.
Thank you Sir
@@Pardeep-b6r no problem at all!
Respected Sir,
Sorry to bother you,
But i don't understand what this means, when you said:
So You have a speed drop to gain 4gb vram.It is upto you if you want the extra vram or not basically...
*would these card support my 3d animation work without bottleneck
@Pardeep-b6r you will not ever avoid some bottleneck, but the 5600g will not bottleneck the 4060 ti or the 4070 for 3d work
Now my confusion about gpu is 100% clear🥰. What do you think about other components in this setup ? Is this perfect?
1. AMD Ryzen 5 5600 Processor - 11200 tk or 7 5800x
2. Cooler master hyper 212 black - 4200 tk
3. Gigabyte 3060 Eagle - 43300 tk
4. G.Skill Trident Z NEO RGB 16GB*2 - 5900*2 tk
5. Samsung 980 pro 1tb ssd - 13000 tk
6. ASRock B550M-HDV DDR4 AMD Motherboard - 11600 tk
7. Corsair CX Series CX650 650W 80 PLUS Bronze ATX Power Supply - 6700 tk
8. Corsair iCUE 4000X RGB Tempered Glass Mid-Tower ATX Case - Black - 13700 tk
9. Monitor: BenQ EW2880U 4k - 55000 tk
Looks like a solid build to me. 8 cores is better for 3D work than 6, but either will do well. The hyper 212 is fantastic, and I pick Corsair cases every time I build a PC for a friend. Enjoy it!
@@ContradictionDesign Aaaaahhhh, this reply feels like a stress reliever for me! 😊🥰 Thanks a lot, brother. And now I have an another little confusion on different models😇 (Gigabyte 3060 Eagle, Eagle OC, Windforce OC, etc.). Which one is the best?
@@Macro_Station The OC models and 3 fan models will be slightly faster and are a little quieter, but I would not worry about it. The upgrades in the cooler are rarely worth it vs the massive price difference between them. So whatever fits in your case and your budget is best. I have plenty of tiny zotac Rtx 4070 that run just fine mining crypto 24/7 for months on end. My big MSI triple fan models run at the same speed, and are slightly warmer.
Seems like the cost of these 3060s have drop through the floor. They're like $250
@@AndyTanguay Which is decent! I would like to throw 6 of them in a DL580 server and see how that does. My current servers don't support GPUs very well, and these dell PCs only do one midsize or two small GPUs.
But honestly one 4090 beats an army of 3060, so that probably makes the most sense.