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Max 5 and 4

Submitted by bullet21 on
Forum

I am just curious to the main differances in the versions of max 5 and 4. I've heard the max 4 has a lot more advancements and so in especially in the UVW mappping and unwrapping area. Could someone clarify if they are very differant, and if it is worth upgrading from 4 to 5.

Submitted by RasTuS on Tue, 22/06/04 - 6:07 PM Permalink

u might want to go from 4 to 6 save having to upgrade again... until the next version

Submitted by J I Styles on Tue, 22/06/04 - 8:33 PM Permalink

I use 4 at home, 5 and 6 at work -- in a practical sense for game art, max 5 offers an improved skin modifier, render to texture, and better uvw tools. If that's worth a couple thousand dollars to you, then upgrade, otherwise I'd suggest ignoring discreets small iterative improvements until they offer something worthwhile of the upgrade and purchase costs.

By the way, all the above improvements are easily added with free third party plugins and utils to max 4 [;)]

Submitted by bullet21 on Tue, 22/06/04 - 9:07 PM Permalink

But does it require a much more powerful machine

Submitted by Fluffy CatFood on Wed, 23/06/04 - 10:14 AM Permalink

I wouldnt say so, 5 takes a bit longer to load than 4 but I havent really noticed much else

Submitted by Kalescent on Wed, 23/06/04 - 10:35 AM Permalink

Bullet21: It depends on what you want to do with the program. if you just want to model some in-game characters etc, you can use it safely on a pretty low-end machine, my old p3 700 works fine with anything up to about 20K tris, anything more than that, and its STARTS to slow down when rotating and zooming etc.

Anything about 30K tris, and its crawling, and animation becomes extremly tiresome.

However, the same goes for todays high spec machines... My fiance's p4 3.2 packs a sad when i set up massive behavioral crowd simulations etc,..

So it depends... if you just want to model and build some models for games etc,.. max 4 - 5 - 6 will run roughly the same, depending mainly on how much ram you have and various options may or may not be available to you depending on your video card / drivers. eg pixel shading in viewports etc etc.

Submitted by souri on Fri, 25/06/04 - 3:34 AM Permalink

I'm blown away about the unwrapping features in Max 5.. I don't want to bore you on how it was done in the old days (you can search for it in the forum about it), but unwrapping was such a big, cumbersome, and non creative step in getting a model done... now it's almost gone.. GONE!!! *evil laugh*

Submitted by bullet21 on Sun, 27/06/04 - 8:58 PM Permalink

How much does it cost to upgrade from 4 to 5. I'm giving serious thought to it, and i have saved up quite a bit plus being holidays i can work more and save more.

Submitted by Kalescent on Sun, 27/06/04 - 10:26 PM Permalink

Quote from videobytes Australia

"3ds max 6 Upgrade from Version 4.x = $2025"

You might be hard pressed to find an upgrade to max 5.x nowadays from a retailer, but you might try on ebay or some such.

There are of course educational versions to, for much cheaper.

Posted by bullet21 on
Forum

I am just curious to the main differances in the versions of max 5 and 4. I've heard the max 4 has a lot more advancements and so in especially in the UVW mappping and unwrapping area. Could someone clarify if they are very differant, and if it is worth upgrading from 4 to 5.


Submitted by RasTuS on Tue, 22/06/04 - 6:07 PM Permalink

u might want to go from 4 to 6 save having to upgrade again... until the next version

Submitted by J I Styles on Tue, 22/06/04 - 8:33 PM Permalink

I use 4 at home, 5 and 6 at work -- in a practical sense for game art, max 5 offers an improved skin modifier, render to texture, and better uvw tools. If that's worth a couple thousand dollars to you, then upgrade, otherwise I'd suggest ignoring discreets small iterative improvements until they offer something worthwhile of the upgrade and purchase costs.

By the way, all the above improvements are easily added with free third party plugins and utils to max 4 [;)]

Submitted by bullet21 on Tue, 22/06/04 - 9:07 PM Permalink

But does it require a much more powerful machine

Submitted by Fluffy CatFood on Wed, 23/06/04 - 10:14 AM Permalink

I wouldnt say so, 5 takes a bit longer to load than 4 but I havent really noticed much else

Submitted by Kalescent on Wed, 23/06/04 - 10:35 AM Permalink

Bullet21: It depends on what you want to do with the program. if you just want to model some in-game characters etc, you can use it safely on a pretty low-end machine, my old p3 700 works fine with anything up to about 20K tris, anything more than that, and its STARTS to slow down when rotating and zooming etc.

Anything about 30K tris, and its crawling, and animation becomes extremly tiresome.

However, the same goes for todays high spec machines... My fiance's p4 3.2 packs a sad when i set up massive behavioral crowd simulations etc,..

So it depends... if you just want to model and build some models for games etc,.. max 4 - 5 - 6 will run roughly the same, depending mainly on how much ram you have and various options may or may not be available to you depending on your video card / drivers. eg pixel shading in viewports etc etc.

Submitted by souri on Fri, 25/06/04 - 3:34 AM Permalink

I'm blown away about the unwrapping features in Max 5.. I don't want to bore you on how it was done in the old days (you can search for it in the forum about it), but unwrapping was such a big, cumbersome, and non creative step in getting a model done... now it's almost gone.. GONE!!! *evil laugh*

Submitted by bullet21 on Sun, 27/06/04 - 8:58 PM Permalink

How much does it cost to upgrade from 4 to 5. I'm giving serious thought to it, and i have saved up quite a bit plus being holidays i can work more and save more.

Submitted by Kalescent on Sun, 27/06/04 - 10:26 PM Permalink

Quote from videobytes Australia

"3ds max 6 Upgrade from Version 4.x = $2025"

You might be hard pressed to find an upgrade to max 5.x nowadays from a retailer, but you might try on ebay or some such.

There are of course educational versions to, for much cheaper.