I am trying to save a lumion file and it keeps defaulting to a drive on my computer with no space even tho I am saving it in an external harddrive. It will not save since it is forcing it in the drive with no space. How can I change the preferences to save to my hard drive?

We are still working on researching this issue. We would like to ask you to try the latest available driver that recently came out and let us know if the same issue still happens. The latest driver version is 31.0.101.4255.


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Thank you for your patience. We want to let you know that we were able to reproduce the issue and the issue has been assigned to our driver developer team in order to come up with a fix at the same time we are also working with the app developer to find the best solution as soon as possible. Please note at the moment there is no estimated time for the fix to be released, once it comes out it will be published through our release notes. We appreciate the information that you provided as well as for reporting this issue to us.

1.1: Lack of disk space on the harddrive or network drive that you saved the Scene file to.


1.2: Lack of disk space on the harddrive or network drive that your Documents folder is located on.

1.4: Overzealous anti-virus software that prevents Lumion from saving the file correctly.


1.5: Saving Lumion Scene files directly to cloud back-up folders, e.g. OneDrive. The back-up software might 'lock' the file before Lumion is done saving it which can result in file corruption.


1.6: Saving Lumion Scene files to a network drive. If the connection drops out while saving the file, the file can become corrupted.


1.7: Lack of Windows permissions. For example if the Windows User Account is a 'Standard' account instead of an 'Administrator' account.

To prevent save errors, we recommend that you follow these instructions:


2.1: Verify that there is plenty of free space on the harddrive/network drive that you are saving the file to (minimum 30 GB when working on complex projects).


2.2: Verify that there is a minimum of 30 GB of free space on the harddrive/network drive that the following folders are located on:

Note: The Virtual Memory will take up the amount of space in the selected drive. Therefore, make sure that there is sufficient free space for the increase. If you selected the drive where your Documents folder is located (usually C), verify that you have more than 30GB of free space after you have made the change. That is necessary for Lumion to work properly.

We believe that with an RTX 3090 GPU, 24GB VRAM, and 128GB RAM, this memory will match the needs of any Lumion project. Even if you use all of the above two types of memory, boosting virtual memory is simple with a 512GB SSD. Furthermore, you can run numerous of these single-card machines simultaneously to boost up the rendering process. The machines you run will all have the same Z drive, making it simple to manage them. Please consider your needs to make a reasonable choice. Learn more about rendering Lumion with iRender HERE.

We have recently run into an issue with one of them where we are getting extreme lagging of the visuals on the workstation with the most notable thing being that the mouse moves horrendously slowly across the screen. Suspecting it might be a GPU issue, I update to the latest NVIDIA drivers but that doesn't seem to have resolve the issue.

The user has indicated that he read that it might require a second video card to drive the non-Lumion display, which I'm having a little trouble accepting considering the power of the GPU. I could see some lag under heavy load but this is like molasses.

Thanks Allen! Appreciate the compliment I'm willing to help those who need help importing from SP to Lumion. There are some quirky things that still drive me crazy (such as the lack of live-sync) but for those who invest the time, the results are pretty impressive!

Does Vray accepts 3DS files from CA? I am trying to find a rendering program other than Lumion. I have Windows 10 with an NVIDIA Geforce GTX 1060 3GB card and the test drive Lumion works fine. What are you folks using out there?

NVMe drives are the fastest type of SSD, so a 1TB drive of that type is a good starting point for most users. If you want to split things up, then 500GB (or more) for the OS and software plus an additional SSD of whatever size you need for files will work well too.

Since SSDs are still more expensive than platter drives per GB, for long-term storage and backup we recommend using a traditional hard drive or even an external drive array. Network attached storage systems are a great way to go for that, as they can be shared between multiple workstations and usually offer features to provide some level of data redundancy (protection against losing files if one of the drives dies).

The performance of your graphics card influences the speed of real-time virtualization and rendering in Lumion 3D. If you use your business workstation exclusively for Lumion 3D, NVIDIA Geforce graphics cards are a very good choice. NVIDIA graphics cards of the Quadro series are optimized for highest detail, finest lines of your 3D models are rendered with exactly the right distances. There are no staircase effects. NVIDIA Quadro cards are built to last. Only high-quality components (bearings and fans) are used. Quadro graphics card types score with pixel accuracy and a life cycle of 3-5 years. Quadro cards are very powerful as soon as they have to deal with very complex 3D models. Lumion works like most architecture programs with straight lines, for standard architecture NVIDIA Geforce graphics cards are a real alternative. NVIDIA Geforce graphics cards are optimized for fast frame rates (frames per second). Most architecture CAD programs work smoothly with the Geforce series. The price-performance ratio of Geforce graphics cards is much better compared to the Quadro series. For standard 2D and 3D models in architecture, we can recommend NVIDIA graphics cards of the Geforce series without hesitation. If you focus on a detailed representation of the smallest elements in your complex 3D models, we advise an NVIDIA graphics card of the Quadro series. For starters, an NVIDIA Quadro P4000 with 8GB of DDR6 or a NVIDIA Geforce 2060 with 6GB graphics card memory is suitable. To edit footage in 4K resolution, you'll need at least 8GB of graphics card memory. We recommend an NVIDIA RTX A4000 with 16GB and with error correction code (ECC), NVIDIA Quadro RTX A5000 with 24GB GDDR6 VRAM or an NVIDIA Geforce RTX3060 with 3584 CUDA cores and 12GB GDDR6 VRAM to achieve top-notch rendering results. Update the graphics card driver at regular intervals. With the Direct X diagnostic program you can display the data of your current graphics card. To do this, enter DXDIAG in the Windows search bar.

The bottleneck for fast renderings is more likely to be the CPU and GPU. The data transfer rate of your hard drives can be another potential bottleneck as your hard drive transfers the data to the rendering engines for processing. We recommend using M.2 SSDs as boot drives for your operating system and CAD programs and storing the current project data on a second S-ATA SSD or a second M.2 NMVe SSD. We offer our business workstation optionally with new Samsung M.2 NVME and S-ATTA SSDs. Samsung SSDs convince with durability, stability and fast read and write accesses.

I want to build the best system I can, staying under $2000 (for the machine only) if possible but can stretch that some if I have to... depends on performance return on investment. The last machine I built was in 2013, had SSD drive for OS and programs with 1TB raid drives for storage. It ran with triple channel RAM and I saw little performance loss over the 7 yrs of use until the motherboard died. I have typically used ASUS motherboards and Intel processors in the past.

I want to install my applications not on C but on D drive.

Reason - after reinstalling Windows, I don't want to reinstall all the applications again.

But, I'm not sure is there any issue about this approach ?

Applications are: MS Office 2010, Adobe CS, WAMP server, Avast...

So idea is - Windows on C, Program Files on D, and Documents on E partition.

Part B) Can I then re-install Windows (from scratch) again (at a later date) on the C drive and NOT have to re-install all the Apps again since they were first installed on a different drive.

YES.. you can installed all your applications to any available drive:\path\to\your\apps location you wish, provided you have enough free space AND the Application Installer (setup.exe) allows you to change the default installation path from "C:\Program Files" to something else.. like "D:\Program Files" for example... Almost all setup programs allow you to select "Custom" as a setup choice to change the install drive:\path location.

So.. if you Re-install Windows from scratch again to... you are effectively deleting the old Registry and therefor deleting any ability for those pre-installed apps on your D: drive to run even though you can still find them on your D: drive manually (Using Windows Explorer; aka My Computer) and try to run them.. they simply won't work as expected.

b) Perform a possible "Upgrade" to a newer version of Windows "ON TOP" of your previous licensed copy of Windows on the same C drive.. which will Preserve all your installed programs so they still work after the windows upgrade;

The 32bit versus 64bit Registry is also one of the primary reasons why it is NOT possible to perform a "Windows Upgrade Install" from an existing 32 Bit version of Windows 7 on your C drive to a 64 Bit version of Windows 7 on the same C drive and have all your pre-installed programs just continue to work regardless of which hard drive you installed them to. ff782bc1db

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