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8 minute read
V25
Armari Magnetar V25 (with dual AMD Radeon Pro WX 7100)
This stylish workstation has been specifically designed for VR. But despite its slimline chassis, you can still fit an incredible amount of processing power inside for CPU or GPU rendering.
The function of a workstation is always defined by its components, but rarely by the form of its chassis. The Armari Magnetar V25 has been designed from the ground up for Virtual Reality (VR) applications. The slimline Japanese steel chassis is great for taking VR wherever you go – conference rooms, client offices or home – and there’s even a pocket for the HTC Vive link box, that crucial part of the VR headset’s setup that so often gets left on the floor by the side of the machine.
Armari is no stranger to designing its own machines. The Hertfordshire-based company has been working with a custom chassis manufacturer in Taiwan for many years. Technical director and founder Dan Goldsmith sketches out his ideas, then his remote engineering partner brings them life in 3D CAD tool PTC Creo drawing on extensive experience. The design goes through several iterations with markups made on an iPad Pro. It’s a finely tuned process that has been honed over many years.
The time to market is impressive. The Magnetar V25 went from sketch to signoff in only two months with just one prototype. Now the focus is on getting the colour just right. The machine comes in two shades : a glossy brilliant Product spec ble with Enscape. Swapping architecture for white, and a special edition ■ Intel Core i7 7700K concept design, the machine blue to match professional graphics brand AMD ‘Kaby Lake’ (4.7GHz overclocked) (4 Cores) CPU sailed through our Gravity Sketch beta sketching and modRadeon Pro. ■ 32GB (2x 16GB) elling VR sessions, although
From the images that Corsair Vengeance Red LED DDR4- this came as little surprise conaccompany this review, you 3000C15 memory sidering the relatively simple won’t need any clues as to ■ 512GB Samsung geometry this neat little appliwhat GPU came with this SM951 M.2 NVMe SSD cation produces. particular machine. What ■ 2 x AMD Radeon Pro WX 7100 (8GB Moving into hardcore engiyou might not have guessed GDDR5) GPUs neering, we imported some is that Armari has packed ■ Microsoft Windows large SolidWorks CAD assemtwo AMD Radeon Pro WX 10 Pro 64-Bit blies into Autodesk VRED 7100 GPUs inside, stacked ■ 360(h) x 87(w) x 400mm (d) Professional. Our little blue vertically on a dual-slot riser (without stand) machine handled a 3.2-million card that splits the 16 PCIe lanes in two. ■ 3 years Parts & Labour, 1st Year collect and return, triangle computer model with ease, though it stuttered when
The AMD Radeon Pro WX 2nd/3rd year RTB we turned on Anti-Aliasing 7100 is a professional, single ■ £2,995 + VAT (AA), a technique that slot ‘VR Ready’ workstation armari.co.uk smoothes the jagged edges of GPU. In the future, it should diagonal lines. be possible to use two of these in tandem With smaller scenes, it was possible to to boost performance in some VR applica- turn AA to low, even with a 2-million tritions (one GPU per eye) but, for now, most angle automotive model with realistic VR applications put the entire graphics paint and materials. processing load on a single GPU. However, with a huge 7-million triangle
The AMD Radeon Pro WX 7100 is real- model, we saw the pure geometry limitaly for entry-level VR. It passed the tions of the GPU as the display flickered VRMark Orange Room benchmark with every time we moved our head to explore flying colours, delivering 142 Frames Per the heavy machinery assembly. We knew Second (the VR pass mark in this games- the V25 was trying its hardest though, as focused test is 109 FPS). However, what two small fans on the top of the chassis we really wanted to know was how it per- kicked into cool the active GPU. formed in real world professional VR On a desktop FHD (1,920 x 1,080) disapplications, so we put on our HTC Vive play, where the demands are so much less, Head Mounted Display (HMD) and the machine performed extremely well. We entered the virtual world. experienced smooth rotation of models in
The machine delivered a good experi- SolidWorks with realistic materials and ence with a variety of Revit models in shadows; also with large BIM models in IrisVR Prospect, one of three architectur- Revit (although in this CPU-limited applial VR applications reviewed on page 20. cation you’d get just as good 3D perfor-
However, it was not powerful enough to mance with a lower-end GPU). explore our Autodesk LIVE test models We also managed to achieve a very flicker-free and was simply not compati- respectable 19 Frames Per Second (FPS),
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rotating a complex 3.5-million triangle automotive styling model in Autodesk VRED Professional with AA set to medium.
Before our second Radeon Pro WX 7100 started to feel left out, we swapped VR for physically-based rendering and set both GPUs to work in the multi-GPUaware Radeon ProRender for 3ds Max. This free plug-in is one of many AMD is developing for 3D applications, including SolidWorks, Rhino and Cinema4D. Other popular GPU renderers that would benefit from this dual-GPU set-up include Chaos Group’s V-Ray RT, which plugs into Revit, SketchUp, Rhino, 3ds Max and others.
After a few minutes of hardcore processing, those fans kicked in again. Noise levels rose but to nothing too dramatic. Considering the size of the box and the combined peak 260W drawn by the GPUs, we found this quite impressive.
If more performance is needed from a single GPU, the two single-slot cards can be swapped for a single dual-slot card, such as the Nvidia Quadro P5000 or Quadro P6000.
While our review machine was optimised for GPU rendering, the Magnetar V25 can also be tuned for CPU renderers like Luxion KeyShot or V-Ray.
The liquid-cooled ‘Kaby Lake’ quad core Intel Core i7 7700K CPU is dynamically overclocked to run at 4.7GHz, so is a great choice for CAD and VR applications which love high frequncies. And while it finished our 4K KeyShot test render in 670 secs, if you want to cut that time significantly you’ll simply need more cores. Here, the machine doesn’t disappoint because, despite its slimline chassis, Armari can offer a choice of Intel Core or Xeon chips, all the way up to 22 cores. In addition to better rendering performance, adding more cores should also reduce the time it takes to import models in VR applications like Autodesk VRED Professional. A Xeon version of the V25 would also have the added benefit of supporting up to 64GB DDR4 memory (the Core i7 version is currently limited to 32GB). For storage, our test machine relied on a single drive – a fast 512GB Samsung SM961 NVMe SSD that sits flush on the motherboard. However, to get more GB for your money, this can be supplemented with 2.5-inch SATA HDDs, if required.
Even with a tiny chassis, the V25 is surprisingly serviceable, though can be a bit tricky in places. To access memory and NVMe storage, simply remove the metal side panel, followed by three thumb screws that secure the CPU’s 14cm radiator and fan. Detaching this also gives you access to the GPU cage and riser board, which can be released by removing another three screws. The 750W low-noise, server-grade Power Supply Unit (PSU) is cold-swappable, and is removed by pulling the handle at the rear of the machine. There’s also a neat replaceable dust filter that pops out from the side of the box.
In addition to a dedicated cage for the HTC Vive link box, the chassis has one other VR-friendly feature. Two programmable buttons on the front of the machine can be used to quick launch or reset VR demos. This could be useful for client presentations, as it can save you having to fiddle around for the mouse.
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Conclusion The Armari Magnetar V25 is a great little machine for VR. The slimline form factor makes it easy to transport and the VR link box cage is a simple and elegant piece of design to help keep those annoying VR cables in check.
Considering the size of the chassis, it is amazing that the V25 offers such flexibility with its internal components, including a choice of multi-core Intel Xeon E5-2600 CPUs to cut through rendering or model import times.
Having two AMD Radeon Pro WX 7100s is great if you are heavily into GPU rendering, but if you want to bring down price and still get enough performance for design viz and entry-level VR applications, then you can reduce this to one. Conversely if you need more GPU power for more demanding VR and high-end viz applications, upscale to an Nvidia Quadro P5000 or Nvidia Quadro P6000.
Greg Corke
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1 HTC Vive link box cage detail, plus front USB ports and progammable VR buttons 2 Side panel removed 3 The CPU fan/radiator panel is removed with three thumb screws 4 PTC Creo CAD model 5 The Magnetar V25 also comes in brilliant glossy white, pictured here alongside a 32-inch curved monitor for scale