
Local Rendering
Workstations designed specifically for rendering and visualization offer optimized performance for visual tasks. With the ability to develop, design, and render on the same machine, these workstations provide flexible options for CPU and GPU configurations.

Remote Rendering
For rendering tasks that require more power than a single workstation can provide, dedicated rendering hardware offers a solution. With the ability to support up to eight single GPUs and dense CPU options, these systems are ideal for tackling large rendering jobs.

Distributed Rendering
For teams working on high-resolution, feature-length animated films, rendering resources are critical. Leverage scalable hardware options and access the rendering power you need, whether through colocation, a private cloud, or on-premises. Accelerate your render jobs with an entire HPC cluster.
Local Rendering Solutions
CWS-6082033
AMD Ryzen 7000X Dual GPU Workstation
- Processor: 1x AMD Ryzen 7000 Series
- Drives: 2x 2.5" and 6x 2.5"/3.5" Internal
- Supports: 2x Double-Wide card (x8/x8)
- Form Factor: Full-Tower
CWS-6081792
NVIDIA RTX AMD Threadripper PRO Workstation
- Processor: 1x AMD Ryzen Threadripper Pro 3000WX/5000WX
- Drive Bays: 6x 3.5"/2.5" and 2x 2.5" Fixed
- Supports: Up to 4x Double-Wide cards
- Form Factor: Full-Tower
Remote and Distributed Rendering Systems

CPU vs. GPU Rendering
Both CPU-based renderers and GPU-based renderers are perfect for their specific tasks. While GPU rendering has gained a lot of traction, CPU rendering still provides stability for rendering static scenes of 3D environments.
GPUs serve to enhance your current CPU system to significantly accelerate image rendering. The GPU tackles resource-intensive 3D visualization while the CPU crunch down on complex tasks. With rendering, you will need both a powerful CPU and GPU.