Evening (o;
Been a while I used Octane for Blender..also while my subscription ran out (o;
Currently I am very happy with E_Cycles which is already based up to latest 2.83 alpha release....
With Octane Blender it is very confusing from the number which Blender version it is based on....anyway (o;
How has the rendering improved in the past builds compared to Blenders original OptiX and E_Cycles OptiX implementation?
The only advantage I see currently with Octane Blender is that it supports NVLink/SLI....
thanks in advance
richard
Makes sense to switch back to Octane Blender
I guess it depends on what you need to render? Some of the advantages are that Octane supports OSL on the GPU, you can import VDB files directly, a better sky model, AI lights, and Vectron/Spectron to name a few.
Jason
Jason
Linux Mint 21.3 x64 | Nvidia GTX 980 4GB (displays) RTX 2070 8GB| Intel I7 5820K 3.8 Ghz | 32Gb Memory | Nvidia Driver 535.171
- linograndiotoy
- Posts: 1350
- Joined: Thu Feb 01, 2018 7:10 pm
Current Octane for Blender is based on 2020 XB3 and Blender 2.81a (the latest "official").davorin wrote:Evening (o;
Been a while I used Octane for Blender..also while my subscription ran out (o;
Currently I am very happy with E_Cycles which is already based up to latest 2.83 alpha release....
With Octane Blender it is very confusing from the number which Blender version it is based on....anyway (o;
How has the rendering improved in the past builds compared to Blenders original OptiX and E_Cycles OptiX implementation?
The only advantage I see currently with Octane Blender is that it supports NVLink/SLI....
thanks in advance
richard
viewtopic.php?f=113&t=73850
Octane is way faster than E-Cycles, the AI Denoiser is doing an amazing job, there's NVLink and RTX support and a lot of optimizations you can only find in the OTOY Blender custom build.
Especially with this new release, I feel we reached an extremely exciting productivity level.
Good day (o;
Has anyone done any speed comparison between Octane and E_Cycles?
Though all the nice plug-ins I have would render useless then..especially for lighting and skies simulation....
Maybe some can be rewritten as I've done one time in the past....
I know, hardcore blender user do their own shaders/python scripts
Regarding NVlink/SLI...heard only that on Linux this is rather difficult to setup, or that it works at all....
The price has gone up I see....last year the Studio subscription was US$ 179, now it is EUR 199.20, around US$ 200.
Maybe I just try it out for one or two months...
Has anyone done any speed comparison between Octane and E_Cycles?
Though all the nice plug-ins I have would render useless then..especially for lighting and skies simulation....
Maybe some can be rewritten as I've done one time in the past....
I know, hardcore blender user do their own shaders/python scripts

Regarding NVlink/SLI...heard only that on Linux this is rather difficult to setup, or that it works at all....
The price has gone up I see....last year the Studio subscription was US$ 179, now it is EUR 199.20, around US$ 200.
Maybe I just try it out for one or two months...
Debian 10.2 on AMD 1950X, 64GB RAM, 2 * RTX2080Ti
Octane Blender Studio 2020.1-XB3-21.3
Blender 2.83 E_Cycles
Octane Blender Studio 2020.1-XB3-21.3
Blender 2.83 E_Cycles
It's 16.60 €/month if you pay yearly and 19.99 €/month for monthly.davorin wrote: The price has gone up I see....last year the Studio subscription was US$ 179, now it is EUR 199.20, around US$ 200.
Maybe I just try it out for one or two months...
Exactly 
12 * EUR 16.60 equals to around US$ 220, so a little more than the last year (o;
BTW: Can I see in Octane Bench 4.00c if NVLink is working under Linux?

12 * EUR 16.60 equals to around US$ 220, so a little more than the last year (o;
BTW: Can I see in Octane Bench 4.00c if NVLink is working under Linux?
Debian 10.2 on AMD 1950X, 64GB RAM, 2 * RTX2080Ti
Octane Blender Studio 2020.1-XB3-21.3
Blender 2.83 E_Cycles
Octane Blender Studio 2020.1-XB3-21.3
Blender 2.83 E_Cycles
Haha, I had a brain fart and counted 10 months a yeardavorin wrote:Exactly
12 * EUR 16.60 equals to around US$ 220, so a little more than the last year (o;
BTW: Can I see in Octane Bench 4.00c if NVLink is working under Linux?

Hmm...are there any example .blend files which reflect those advantages?grimm wrote:I guess it depends on what you need to render? Some of the advantages are that Octane supports OSL on the GPU, you can import VDB files directly, a better sky model, AI lights, and Vectron/Spectron to name a few.
Jason
thanks in advance
richard
Debian 10.2 on AMD 1950X, 64GB RAM, 2 * RTX2080Ti
Octane Blender Studio 2020.1-XB3-21.3
Blender 2.83 E_Cycles
Octane Blender Studio 2020.1-XB3-21.3
Blender 2.83 E_Cycles
Unfortunately I don't have the time to collect or construct example files. There are many peppered in the Blender forum here and on Blender Artists, like this one about importing OpenVDB files...
https://blenderartists.org/t/octanerend ... 67?u=grimm
I was wrong about Spectron, it's not supported yet in the plugin.
Jason
https://blenderartists.org/t/octanerend ... 67?u=grimm
I was wrong about Spectron, it's not supported yet in the plugin.

Jason
Linux Mint 21.3 x64 | Nvidia GTX 980 4GB (displays) RTX 2070 8GB| Intel I7 5820K 3.8 Ghz | 32Gb Memory | Nvidia Driver 535.171