Tzk wrote: ↑11 Feb 2025, 07:55
Espresso wrote: ↑08 Feb 2025, 21:59
It’s the number of cores and not the speed thats (more) important
While the rest of your post is true, the statement above isn't. CAD software has been and is still single-threaded and thus directly bound to the speed of a single core. Yes, for certain tasks you'll need a lot of cores (CFD, FEM, rendering), but for general modeling the task isn't run parallel on lots of cores. So make sure to get a cpu which got enough single-thread power and still has a decent amount of cores. Do not buy a beefy server cpu which usually runs at quite low clocks. Also SWX afaik doesn't benefit from AMDs X3D cpus and lots of on-die cache.
I'd buy a decent 8-12 core cpu like the AMD 9700/9900 or a similar intel. add 32gb or 64gb of ram and a smallish quadro gpu and you're all set.
Exactly!, single core power still is king for most of Solidworks, specially sketches with lots of patterns and stuff like this need a lot of single core power. Running a RTX A2000 in my work laptop, but it never really gets stressed for the work i do. Mainly mechanical engineering work, so basically drafting products/assemblies. Running a i7-12800H , specifically because it is reasonably good single core for a laptop, still struggeling often because of the way Solidworks uses the processor unfortunatly.
So the best tip is to see what kind of work you'll be using it for, and which route to take on the processor of GPU accordingly. Drafting or rendering, 2d-drawings or CAE work etc..