The 2080 Ti drivers show compatibility with other GeForce cards, and likewise the RTX4000 drivers show compatibility with other Quadro cards.Regarding the other parts of the computer:I recently completed my first PC build, with the initial intention of it being my CAD/Adobe workstation. Nvidia Quadro P4000. “If it’s worth doing, it’s worth over-doing?” That pretty much sums me up in a nutshell.I’ll try out the SW benchmarks - would love to have some numbers to quantify the “feel.” In Cinebench 20, they are pretty similar with the 2080 Ti at 9050 and the RTX4000 at 8940 IIRC.QUESTION 2: Can I run both?

It also seems to be quicker in SW, especially noticeable when editing lots of sketch dimensions - when doing this with the RTX 4000, the PC seems to "think" a bit longer before allowing a dim to be edited.In all seriousness, I run a design agency and the work we do varies greatly and hits the full spectrum of design.

From what I read, the same driver has to run both cards - and I can't seem to find one on Nvidia's site that shows compatibility with both. It will also help quantify the "feels faster"Hell, even video games that use the engine to render the UI (e.g.


2080 Ti is returnable.

I might. vs. Nvidia Quadro K4000. Easy enough to run both cards, sounds like that'll work.That sounds intriguing. The RTX 4000 with Turing architecture scored well compared to the Quadro P4000 with Pascal architecture. The Titan will do CAD, will game, and its a rendering monster.

I suspect the RTX 4000 would be fine with "high" settings instead of using "ultra" settings in the game.For the same reason, the Quadro card is not going to be faster for gaming as it is not optimized to cull back faces and render a 2D view of 3D information.I think I get it, but does each monitor 'use' the GPU that it is plugged into? Fortunately I've been able to recover everything, but it has me worried.Any way to have two separate accounts on the computer where one disables the "unwanted" graphics card? It seems like I've read that the GeForce card has to go in the top as it is 16 pin vs the Quadro at 4 (or something like that - I'm a noob in the custom PC world)?Another thing you could test if interested is the SW Benchmark tool.

Despite how popular SOLIDWORKS is, there is a lot of outdated and simply inaccurate information on the web regarding what video card you should use. This is especially true for SW 2019, because it adds a new mode that changes how the video card is utilized when displaying parts and assemblies. I think it's under SW Tools in the start menu. NVIDIA Quadro RTX 4000 vs AMD Radeon Pro WX 7100.
These parameters indirectly speak of Quadro RTX 5000 and Quadro RTX 4000's performance, but for precise assessment you have to consider its benchmark and gaming test results.

That setting auto-enables when the graphics card is a complete potato. If you only have one monitor, that will be a hassle. Not the end of the world if you're not doing anything too complex.I'd like to run the 2080 Ti, but have noticed after a day of running SW hard, that it seems to be "corrupting files" or something. If you are going to be doing modeling for work, you are going to get the Quadro RTX 4000 and concessions will be made for gaming.Yeah, I run two monitors - one 144 hz for gaming and a 6o hz ultra-wide for CAD.

But I don't play many FPS games these days where I need the bestest graphics. As I got going, however, I started getting interested in PC gaming and the tech behind a gaming/hybrid workstation build.The biggest issue has to do with 'backface culling'. I.e. I know it isn't officially supported by SolidWorks, but I want to keep it as it is epic in games and the "feel" is faster in SW.How does the saying go? Despite how popular SOLIDWORKS is, there is a lot of outdated and simply inaccurate information on the web regarding what video card you should use. vs. Nvidia Quadro K4000. It's a good computer for sure, but seems over-powered for games and CAD. How do I sell a used RTX4000?? And a system with SSDs should boot in ~20 seconds, so it's not like switching between the two accounts is a hassle.I think two cards are a great solution to the "but I want to play games on my CAD system" post that shows up weekly.

New shading technologies and next generation GPU memory allow efficient visualization of even the most complex designs and assemblies. Like • Show 2 Likes 2.

The Nvidia Quadro RTX 4000 for laptops is a professional high-end graphics card for big and powerful laptops and mobile workstations. Quadro RTX 5000 and Quadro RTX 4000's general performance parameters such as number of shaders, GPU core clock, manufacturing process, texturing and calculation speed. Any of the junk behind the faces is ignored (culled) thus decreasing the amount of processing a gaming card has to carry out. ... - we are in the beginnings of a wkst replacement for all of our users and are looking at updating the final spec to the RTX-4000 instead of the P4000. The Titan will do CAD, will game, and its a rendering monster.Can you make an RTX 2080 Ti reliable for SOLIDWORKS? Otherwise the setting is often manually enabled to resolve "weirdness" like blinking toolbars, streaking graphics, crashing, missing faces, and any other oddness typically associated with using a gaming card with SW.I would not complain if anyone gave me the computer, but might try to reduce the cost (especially given the two video cards) if building for myself.