P3200 Gaming

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Ashley

unread,
Aug 4, 2024, 8:20:10 PM8/4/24
to clearilweavi
Thisis our combined benchmark performance score. We are regularly improving our combining algorithms, but if you find some perceived inconsistencies, feel free to speak up in comments section, we usually fix problems quickly.

This is the most ubiquitous GPU benchmark, part of Passmark PerformanceTest suite. It gives the graphics card a thorough evaluation under various types of load, providing four separate benchmarks for Direct3D versions 9, 10, 11 and 12 (the last being done in 4K resolution if possible), and few more tests engaging DirectCompute capabilities.


3DMark Vantage is an outdated DirectX 10 benchmark using 1280x1024 screen resolution. It taxes the graphics card with two scenes, one depicting a girl escaping some militarized base located within a sea cave, the other displaying a space fleet attack on a defenseless planet. It was discontinued in April 2017, and Time Spy benchmark is now recommended to be used instead.


3DMark 11 is an obsolete DirectX 11 benchmark by Futuremark. It used four tests based on two scenes, one being few submarines exploring the submerged wreck of a sunken ship, the other is an abandoned temple deep in the jungle. All the tests are heavy with volumetric lighting and tessellation, and despite being done in 1280x720 resolution, are relatively taxing. Discontinued in January 2020, 3DMark 11 is now superseded by Time Spy.


Fire Strike is a DirectX 11 benchmark for gaming PCs. It features two separate tests displaying a fight between a humanoid and a fiery creature made of lava. Using 1920x1080 resolution, Fire Strike shows off some realistic graphics and is quite taxing on hardware.


Cloud Gate is an outdated DirectX 11 feature level 10 benchmark that was used for home PCs and basic notebooks. It displays a few scenes of some weird space teleportation device launching spaceships into unknown, using fixed resolution of 1280x720. Just like Ice Storm benchmark, it has been discontinued in January 2020 and replaced by 3DMark Night Raid.


Ice Storm Graphics is an obsolete benchmark, part of 3DMark suite. Ice Storm was used to measure entry level laptops and Windows-based tablets performance. It utilizes DirectX 11 feature level 9 to display a battle between two space fleets near a frozen planet in 1280x720 resolution. Discontinued in January 2020, it is now superseded by 3DMark Night Raid.


NVIDIA started Quadro P3200 sales 27 February 2017. This is a Pascal architecture notebook card based on 16 nm manufacturing process and primarily aimed at designers. 6 GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at 7.01 GHz are supplied, and together with 192 Bit memory interface this creates a bandwidth of 168.3 GB/s.


Geekbench 5 is a widespread graphics card benchmark combined from 11 different test scenarios. All these scenarios rely on direct usage of GPU's processing power, no 3D rendering is involved. This variation uses OpenCL API by Khronos Group.


Geekbench 5 is a widespread graphics card benchmark combined from 11 different test scenarios. All these scenarios rely on direct usage of GPU's processing power, no 3D rendering is involved. This variation uses Vulkan API by AMD & Khronos Group.


Geekbench 5 is a widespread graphics card benchmark combined from 11 different test scenarios. All these scenarios rely on direct usage of GPU's processing power, no 3D rendering is involved. This variation uses CUDA API by NVIDIA.


I hope these questions might help you in determining which laptop is right for you:

What is your budget? $1,500?

What screen size are you comfortable with? 15.6?

What weight are you comfortable lugging around?


At that price point you are better off with a PC with a good gaming card. And something that has a good guarantee/support in your country. Dells and Lenovos are very reliable. Not familiar with the other brands.


The lenovo P51s has the P500, which is also the current generation, but it is the entry level product in terms of performance. The Dell Precision 5530 (just came out) has the P1000 and P2000 options which are mid-market products in term of performance. You could definitely build out a Precision 5530 in the $1800 price range with a P1000 and have a decent amount of memory and a small capacity solid state drive, but what trade offs you take to make the budget are up to you (The $2100 budget would definitely be a nice upgrade to the $1800 variant, but then it becomes what you NEED versus want).


Hi, Yesterday EA released a BF 5 update and it now requires nvidia drivers of a certain level. Well I run a quaddro p3200 driver and they are not available yet so I can't play the game. Can I bypass the version check to play bf5. I am totally stuck.


I have geforce experience. Nvidia has not released a newer driver for my type of card. Apparently they release drivers for gaming cards but not professional graphics cards like I have last week. So that does not help, but thank you for commenting.


I have not tried this personally but it's a known workaround for Frostbite Nvidia driver checks so it's probably either that or wait for Nvidia to update your professional production graphics card which can take ages.


Yes guys, I WAS supported by BF5 and BF5 worked until the driver release 3 days ago. They did not release new p3200 drivers, only for gaming cards. They left my professional card drivers out of the release so now my game won't boot.


You can not use performance metrics to justify that Quadro cards are within the minimum specifications because Quadro cards are not even mentioned in the specifications which mean all Quadro cards are officially not supported (and with good reason because they are not gaming cards and Nvidia does not treat them as gaming cards). It's like saying monster trucks should be able to participate in the 24 hour Le Mans race just because they have enough horsepower.


Welcome to our forum! The corresponding laptop has to meet our system requirements - the IntelHD Graphics are not supported by Enscape I'm afraid, we require a graphics card with at least 2 GB of VRAM, and that card also has to support at least OpenGL 4.4.


Most of our users run Enscape on a laptop, but you need to spec the laptops with using Enscape (or similar software) in mind. For example: our olders ones have a geforce 1070ti and the new ones a gforce 2070ti.


There are several currently available running the Quadro RTX 5000 card with 16 GB of VRAM from MSI, Dell, Alienware, Asus, BOXX, IBM/Lenova, and possibly HP. They are sometimes referred to as "RTX Studio" machines.


Ive just got a quote for new PNY Prevail pro laptop to sue with revit and enscape. Graphic spec. seems to be: NVIDIA Quatro Mobile P300 / 6GB GDDDR5 GPU memory / Open GL 4.5 DirectX 12, Vulkan compatible / CUDA, Open CL, Dircet Compute Comptible. The questions are; will this allow me decent to Enscape functionality now and ii) Is this enough to future proof me for Enscape evolutions over next couple of years ? Thanks


I would recommend on a Lenovo p53. Make sure to get the version that has the rtx 2080 card. It has gotten great reviews and is the laptop of choice for vfx peeps. I'm currently waiting to get an upgrade.


Note the P53 uses Quadro GPUs (the RTX-capable 3000/4000/5000) - not the "gaming" RTX 20xx series. The P53s have some issues with thermal throttling that Lenovo still seems to be working on. We have a couple of them and have gotten them sorted out for general Enscape use but they still have issues with VR.


With the various laptops and GPUs I've tested, if you need to do VR I would stick with the gaming 2070/2080 models. (preferably non-max-Q, but those are larger laptops.) The Quadros just don't perform as well, especially if you take price into account. Happy to discuss if anyone wants more details.

3a8082e126
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages