3DVagabond
Lifer
- Aug 10, 2009
- 11,951
- 204
- 106
Agree. I am in the same boat as I am about ready to update my rendering farm again. I have waited to see how BD performs before making a decision. If BD doesn't keep up, then the decision I had already made--to go with 2600k's, will be what I do.
Although to be honest, I generally don't overclock my rendering machines, sort of like server workloads, I prefer lower or stock clocks and stability. The main workstation, yes I will overclock, because doing test renders is often quicker on one machine than sending it over the network and waiting to inspect the image--depends on how heavy the scene is.
But keeping stable overclocks on several machines at once is not something I like to do. Stability is key for me as I sometime sell rendering time to another small local studio if they are behind. I hate having to chase down corrupt frames, especially when the work isn't mine.
The machines render faster when overclocked for sure, but I have had times in the past when they go to send their frames back across the network, something goes wrong. I don't know if the overclock caused the NIC's to have problems or what. But I have never noticed it when running everything at stock.
To be honest though, that was a long time ago when I first encountered that, but since then, I have always went stock with the rendering machines in the farm. It may have been something inherent in those first machines many years ago and the way I had it setup. But ever since then I have just went stock when upgrading.
I agree not O/C'ing for a render farm. Heat, power, etc. are important. I'm just talking for a work station though. I just do it as a hobby. I make game models and the most time consuming task for me is baking textures. I'd like to speed that up as much as possible for as little cash as possible. BD has the potential to be best bang/$. At least I'm hoping it does. Hard to say with the benches they've been showing though. Keeping my fingers crossed. :\