PC Pro

Scan 3XS GWP-ME N1-32T

The perfect platform for Nvidia’s Quadro RTX A6000 flagship – the fastest content creation GPU around

- JAMES MORRIS

SCORE

PRICE £7,500 (£9,000 inc VAT) from pcpro.link/319scan

Over the space of only three years, AMD has virtually taken over the performanc­e high ground for workstatio­n CPUs – but Nvidia still rules the roost for workstatio­n 3D accelerati­on for content creation. So, to deliver the best of both worlds, Scan picks AMD for the CPU and Nvidia for the GPU.

That Nvidia graphics card is monstrous: the latest flagship Quadro RTX A6000. 6000-series Quadros have always been uncompromi­sing, but the A6000 takes things to another level, with 48GB of error-correcting GDDR6 memory. This is ideal for workloads where predictabl­e precision is paramount, and bandwidth is a whopping 768GB/sec. The A6000 uses Nvidia’s Ampere architectu­re, boasting an unbelievab­le 10,752 CUDA cores. The previous Turingbase­d RTX 6000 only had 24GB of memory and 4,608 CUDA cores – less than half as many.

A GPU as powerful as the Quadro RTX A6000 – which makes up half the price of this system – warrants an equally powerful workstatio­n platform, and Scan delivers. The AMD Ryzen Threadripp­er 3970X isn’t the top of the latest Threadripp­er range but it’s the most sensible choice for a balanced workstatio­n. It still has 32 cores running at a base 3.7GHz with a boost up to 4.5GHz. With Performanc­e Boost Overdrive, the number of cores that can achieve this at once depends on the power delivery and cooling ability of the w o r k s t a t i o n , making it a processor that’s equally great for singlethre­aded and multithrea­ded tasks.

Scan installs the Threadripp­er in an Asus ROG Strix TRX40-E Gaming motherboar­d, which has 2.5Gbits/sec LAN and three M.2 NVMe storage slots. Scan has partnered the CPU with a generous 128GB of Corsair Vengeance LPX 3,600MHz DDR4 memory, supplied as four DIMMs to take advantage of the Threadripp­er’s quad-channel memory architectu­re. Insert four more identical DIMMs into the vacant slots and you’ll hit the motherboar­d’s memory ceiling of 256GB.

While the

AMD CPU and Asus board support PCIe 4, the Nvidia graphics card only operates at PCIe 3 speed. One peripheral device that does support PCIe 4 is the 2TB WD Black SN850 NVMe M.2 SSD supplied as the boot drive. And it’s fast, delivering stunning 7,068MB/sec sequential reads and 5,180MB/sec sequential writes in our tests.

Scan takes the typical approach of partnering this hugely quick main drive with a larger, slower SATA drive for general data. However, the days of convention­al hard disks are clearly numbered because this device is a 4TB Samsung 860 Evo SSD, which delivers more pedestrian 570MB/sec sequential reading and 505MB/sec sequential writing; that’s still more than twice as fast as convention­al

SATA hard disks.

“Its modelling abilities are the best we’ve seen, and having 32 cores means that multithrea­ded tasks will be dispatched without drama”

All this potent hardware has been installed inside a sizeable Fractal Design Define 7 chassis – a serious black obelisk with few external features other than the USB and audio ports on the top front edge, although the version supplied has a glass side panel as well. This case provides bays for six 3.5in or 2.5in drives with potential for up to 14. There are two 2.5in bays, but a further two can be added. The processor is ably watercoole­d by a CoolerMast­er ML360R with its radiator at the top of the case, and there’s a 1,000W Corsair RMi Series modular 80+ Gold PSU to ensure all the components are reliably supplied with power. When this machine gets going, you’re hit with a mighty roar.

In return, you get top-notch performanc­e. The overall score in the PC Pro benchmarks of 633 is excellent: the 3XS managed 226 in image editing, 594 in video encoding and 794 in multitaski­ng. The Cinebench R20 rendering score of 17,526 is even more exceptiona­l, with only AMD’s own 64-core Threadripp­er 3990X performing better.

The GPU is the star here, though, and running SPECviewpe­rf 13 shows just how powerful the Quadro RTX A6000 is.

For content creation, the 3XS managed 336 in the 3ds Max viewset and 417 in Maya. For engineerin­g and CAD, 384 in Catia,

375 in Creo, 617 in Siemens NX and 196 in SolidWorks are all significan­tly ahead of anything we’ve tested before. And the GPGPU accelerati­on is out of this world, with 18,347 in LuxMark 3.1 where the previous Quadro RTX 6000 could only manage under 10,000. We cover this machine’s equally astonishin­g SPECviewpe­rf 2020 scores in the Acer ConceptD review opposite.

In short, there’s little this Scan 3XS workstatio­ns won’t accomplish. Its modelling abilities are the best we’ve seen, and those 32 cores mean that multithrea­ded tasks will be dispatched without drama. The sole negative is its price. However, your £7,500 exc VAT buys a huge amount of workstatio­n, and one that could soon pay you back in time savings for heavy content creation and engineerin­g workloads.

SPECIFICAT­IONS

3.7GHz AMD Ryzen Threadripp­er 3970X CPU 128GB 3,600MHz DDR4 SDRAM PNY Nvidia Quadro RTX A6000 graphics with 48GB GDDR6 ECC memory 2TB WD Black SN850 M.2 NVMe SSD 4TB Samsung 860 Evo SATA SSD Windows 10 Pro 64-bit 3yr warranty (1yr on-site, 2yr RTB, parts and labour)

 ??  ?? LEFT The gold Quadro RTX A6000 GPU isn’t subtle, but then nor is its performanc­e
LEFT The gold Quadro RTX A6000 GPU isn’t subtle, but then nor is its performanc­e
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ABOVE The sober chassis means the eye is drawn to the potent components within
ABOVE The sober chassis means the eye is drawn to the potent components within
 ??  ?? BELOW There’s a feast of ports around the back – as there should be for £7,500
BELOW There’s a feast of ports around the back – as there should be for £7,500

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