Emitter issue

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MaTtY631990
Licensed Customer
Posts: 754
Joined: Thu Apr 08, 2010 8:38 pm

Not sure if this issue has been brought up. I have two emitter materials for a scene. I applied one for some wall lights and used an IES file to setup distribution and was fine. I created a new emitter for other bulbs and the 1st emitter became hugely slow to converge to clean result. It creates the effect where there are random fireflies on the surface from which the light effects.
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steveps3
Licensed Customer
Posts: 1118
Joined: Sat Aug 21, 2010 4:07 pm
Location: England

The more light sources you add, the slower rendering will be. It's just the way that it has to calculate light coming from 2 places rather than 1.
(HW) Intel i7 2600k, 16GB DDR3, MSI 560GTX ti (2GB) x 3
(SW) Octane (1.50) Blender (2.70) (exporter 2.02)
(OS) Windows 7(64)
MaTtY631990
Licensed Customer
Posts: 754
Joined: Thu Apr 08, 2010 8:38 pm

That's not the problem I did test with one emitter material on each object (2 in total) and then the previous emitter became almost useless as though the engine had a difficult time sampling the light from the emitter, where as with one emitter on all these objects it would render fine. I may be wrong but this may be an issue with having one emitter with IES file and a standard emitter. Could be a bug.
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roeland
OctaneRender Team
Posts: 1823
Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2011 10:09 pm

Octane can have problems with light sources that are very small compared to other light sources in the scene. Are your light sources similar in size?

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Roeland
MaTtY631990
Licensed Customer
Posts: 754
Joined: Thu Apr 08, 2010 8:38 pm

One is a bit larger than the other. One of the lights in my scene is attached to a wall surface and is projected down and hitting the surrounding surface. Another light is dangling from a ceiling and the emitting object is bigger than the wall light. Although I noticed this with direct light and the problem also occured in pathtracing which it seemed like it could take a huge amount of time to compute and sample those light areas, with pmc it helped me and did a more efficient job in this case.
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