Yihh Posted July 16, 2009 Share Posted July 16, 2009 (edited) This is starting to be irritating, and I thought that maybe you guys might have a solution for it. At school, the computers we use for rendering are Core 2 Duo's @ 2.4Ghz with 2g of Ram. We were using VIZ 2008 and MentalRay as the renderer. It was an intermediate graphics class, so some of our scenes were somewhat complex. I just got a new computer at home, which I thought was going to exceed the performance of the ones I used at school. It is a i7 quad core at 2.6Ghz and 6g of ram. I'm only running 32bit Vista ultimate so I know I can't use all the ram, but in the least I thought my performance would be better than that of schools. I'm also using Max2009 and Vray as my renderer, which I also expected to be more efficient than mental ray. The problem arrives that when i'm setting up even a rather normal scene, (attached) the buckets move extremely fast (2min for attached 800x600 example), but then it will just hard crash for no particular reason. At school, the buckets moved slow as molasses (sometimes taking students 12-15hr to complete a 1600x1200 rendering), but it had never hard crashed once on any of my projects nor my classmates. Is there some sort of setting that I am forgetting to check? I have plenty of time, so I don't mind the buckets taking longer, but it's frustrating to come back to see my rendering be almost done and then crash to the desktop. In the scene, I have a displacement map on the grass closest to the camera, and a few lampposts and benches. I haven't even added my building, nor the trees. Max counts the faces at 35229 ( Thanks for your help! ps. I also failed to mention that at school we had some generic Radeon card, and I am running a Radeon 4890. The memory has also passed memchecks and I can run new video games with ease, so i'm fairly certain that they are not corrupt. Edited July 16, 2009 by Yihh forgot some information Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KIT Posted July 16, 2009 Share Posted July 16, 2009 Well if you are porting the same scene, then maybe there are some traces of MentalRay (materials, scene settings, etc) that are making Vray crash. Does the crash happen on any specific point of the render? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
d4legend Posted July 16, 2009 Share Posted July 16, 2009 that happend with my new computer. make sure youve got the latest service packs for 3ds max that will fix the problem with your graphics card crashing the render. telling ya it will work Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Yihh Posted July 16, 2009 Author Share Posted July 16, 2009 It usually crashes after the prepasses, and sometime during the actual rendering process. I guess my main question was whether or not there is an option for the rendering to take up less memory/more stable but take longer? I didn't think that the gpu would have anything to do with the crashing...hrm Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KIT Posted July 16, 2009 Share Posted July 16, 2009 Well, if you think it's a memory problem then check if the rendering process is actually eating up all your system memory, but from what you've said so far I really doubt that's the problem. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
manta Posted July 16, 2009 Share Posted July 16, 2009 try this... http://www.cgarchitect.com/vb/36106-large-render-print-vray-crashing-help.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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