scan tailor experimental - best video card?
Moderator: peterZ
scan tailor experimental - best video card?
I will be building a system just to scan books and wondered what the best video card was for scantailor experimental? I ask this as I have read that scantailor experimental can use the GPU to speed up processing. With this in mind what is the best video card to buy in terms of cost / performance?
Re: scan tailor experimental - best video card?
In image processing applications, GPU memory bandwidth tends to be the bottleneck. So, your performance / cost ratio may well be the "memory bandwidth / cost" ratio. For memory bandwidth of a particular graphics card, consult Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_N ... sing_units
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_A ... sing_units
Still, note that as far as Scan Tailor Experimental performance goes, investing in a good CPU may well beat investing into a good GPU.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_N ... sing_units
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_A ... sing_units
Still, note that as far as Scan Tailor Experimental performance goes, investing in a good CPU may well beat investing into a good GPU.
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: scan tailor experimental - best video card?
Hi Tulon, thanks for your reply. I was already aware of those lists on Wikipedia, but I was kind of hoping to get some insight into the real world experience of members. Also any benchmarks that people had to compare.Tulon wrote:In image processing applications, GPU memory bandwidth tends to be the bottleneck. So, your performance / cost ratio may well be the "memory bandwidth / cost" ratio. For memory bandwidth of a particular graphics card, consult Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_N ... sing_units
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_A ... sing_units
Still, note that as far as Scan Tailor Experimental performance goes, investing in a good CPU may well beat investing into a good GPU.
As the creator of scantailor, I would be really interested to hear what card you use, or what you would personally pick if you were building a system today?
Re: scan tailor experimental - best video card?
I have a laptop with GeForce 760m graphics card. From what I remember, enabling OpenCL on that card boosts performance of the Output stage by about two times. Other stages (apart from dewarping on the Deskew stage) gain very little.
There are some actual benchmarks (not from me though) on the "Scan Tailor Experimental" thread.
It's hard for me to recommend a particular card. If I was choosing a desktop card for my purposes (not strictly for Scan Tailor), I would probably go for GeForce 1060, which is a pretty good all-rounder. On the other hand, Radeon RX 480 is slightly cheaper while having higher memory bandwidth (particularly the 8GB version).
From a purely theoretical point of view, Radeon R9 Fury / Radeon R9 Nano should beat even GeForce 1080 due to higher memory bandwidth.
There are some actual benchmarks (not from me though) on the "Scan Tailor Experimental" thread.
It's hard for me to recommend a particular card. If I was choosing a desktop card for my purposes (not strictly for Scan Tailor), I would probably go for GeForce 1060, which is a pretty good all-rounder. On the other hand, Radeon RX 480 is slightly cheaper while having higher memory bandwidth (particularly the 8GB version).
From a purely theoretical point of view, Radeon R9 Fury / Radeon R9 Nano should beat even GeForce 1080 due to higher memory bandwidth.
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.