sprashanth
Mechanical
- Sep 19, 2008
- 16
Our company recently purchased a couple of HP workstations with Quad-Core processor and 8GB RAM to run High-mesh FEA simulation on our CAD models, since we were unable to do so effectively with our existing dual-core systems with 2GB RAM. But unfortunately, the new workstations have not yielded significant improvement over the old ones.
For example, our CAD model upon preprocessing with High mesh has typically about 100,000 nodes, 500,000 elements and above 2,000,000 degrees of freedom. On our existing Dual-core systems, it would take about 4 days or more for the simulation to run & on the new workstations, it takes 3 days to run - which isn't that significantly better, considering we have double the processor speed and four times more RAM. Our requirement is to finish each FEA within a day, and 3 days for each is just too long.
What could be the reason for the shortcomings of the new workstations? Is there some software or harware settings we need to set so as to maximize the performance, or are we just expecting too much out of the new workstations? By the way, we have installed Windows XP 64-bit operating system on the workstations.
For example, our CAD model upon preprocessing with High mesh has typically about 100,000 nodes, 500,000 elements and above 2,000,000 degrees of freedom. On our existing Dual-core systems, it would take about 4 days or more for the simulation to run & on the new workstations, it takes 3 days to run - which isn't that significantly better, considering we have double the processor speed and four times more RAM. Our requirement is to finish each FEA within a day, and 3 days for each is just too long.
What could be the reason for the shortcomings of the new workstations? Is there some software or harware settings we need to set so as to maximize the performance, or are we just expecting too much out of the new workstations? By the way, we have installed Windows XP 64-bit operating system on the workstations.