Non-Speedy File Saves
Non-Speedy File Saves
(OP)
Has there been anyone that has experienced a save time increase when saving a file that has an assembly created with the routing add-in?
The raw assembly saves almost as fast as I push the save button, as soon as I add a routing assembly, the save time climbs to 10 minutes+. I never experienced this problem when using 2009, it has only been a problem since we've upgraded to 2010. The routing files in the models made with 2009 were huge before we experienced a wait time while saving, whereas the ones that I'm creating with 2010 only take a small routing file before the save time increases.
Windows XP x64
Xeon X5482 Processor
8 GB Ram
Nvidia QuadroFX 4800
The raw assembly saves almost as fast as I push the save button, as soon as I add a routing assembly, the save time climbs to 10 minutes+. I never experienced this problem when using 2009, it has only been a problem since we've upgraded to 2010. The routing files in the models made with 2009 were huge before we experienced a wait time while saving, whereas the ones that I'm creating with 2010 only take a small routing file before the save time increases.
Windows XP x64
Xeon X5482 Processor
8 GB Ram
Nvidia QuadroFX 4800






RE: Non-Speedy File Saves
Joe Hasik,
CSWP/SMTL/MTLS
SW 10 x64, SP 3.0
Dell T3400
Intel Core2 Quad
Q6700 2.66 GHz
3.93 GB RAM
NVIDIA Quadro FX 4600
RE: Non-Speedy File Saves
Anna Wood
Core i7 EE965, FirePro V8700, 12 Gb RAM, OCZ Vertex 120 Gb SSD, Dell 3008WFP 30" Monitor
SW2010 SP2.1, Windows 7 x64
http://www.solidmuse.com
http://www.phxswug.com
RE: Non-Speedy File Saves
DekkerDesign, I was afraid it might be something else, but I can only repeat the problem when using routing so I'm not sure where else to look.
When you are creating your routes, do you attempt to make them in as few routes as possible, or do you do your best to break them up into shorter runs? Does it even matter in your situation? A coworker suggested that I might be making mine too big, and exceeding common practice on how many parts to put into one assembly, but I'm certain in 2009 I've made them much bigger.
RE: Non-Speedy File Saves
Joe Hasik,
CSWP/SMTL/MTLS
SW 10 x64, SP 3.0
Dell T3400
Intel Core2 Quad
Q6700 2.66 GHz
3.93 GB RAM
NVIDIA Quadro FX 4600