<html><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; -webkit-line-break: after-white-space; "><div><div>On Jun 22, 2009, at 3:53 PM, Ibrahim Moustafa wrote:</div><br class="Apple-interchange-newline"><blockquote type="cite"><div> <font face="Calibri, Verdana, Helvetica, Arial"><span style="font-size:11pt">Dear Chimera team,<br> <br> Recently, I have some trouble saving images with POV-RAY option “true”. The process of rendering is too slow (both on the mac and windows version).<br> To give the feeling of how slow: rendering an image with 1700 lines takes 7 hrs (with quality 9 in pov-ray options) and 2 hrs (quality 5). I used to get the images rendered much faster than that (with older versions; however, I’m not exactly sure of when I started to see such a slow rendering behavior).<br></span></font></div></blockquote><div><br></div>I'm guessing you're using transparent surfaces. We've made improvements in the fidelity of translation of transparent colors between Chimera and POV-Ray since the 1.3 release. In 1.3, the transparent colors were much darker than they appeared in Chimera. This change increases the rendering time because the amount of supersampling that POV-ray performs depends on how much color variation there is in the image and the new scheme provides a lot more variation than its uniformly dark predecessor. One example I tried produced slightly more than a factor of two in rendering times between the 1.3 version and the current daily build.</div><div><br></div><div>Now, if you're rendering such a high-resolution image you don't really need as much effort expended on each individual pixel as you do for a smaller image. I find that if I increase the "Antialias threshold" POV-Ray option from 0.3 to 1.0 then I get an almost unchanged image in approximately the same time as as the 1.3 version required. You might even be able to go higher than that and still get a good image.</div><div><br><blockquote type="cite"><div><font face="Calibri, Verdana, Helvetica, Arial"><span style="font-size:11pt"> There is another related problem but only with the windows version: If I want to save an image, with depth cue, using the fast mode (POV-RAY false), the image output lacks any depth used in the model, with poor quality and darker than it should be. Somehow, the camera orientation is messed. In addition, the depth cue will be no longer available for the rest of the session (I have to restart over again). To get the depth cue I want, I need to turn the POV-RAY option “true”....but then too slow to create a good figure.<br></span></font></div></blockquote><div><br></div>I understand that Greg (who works on this code) recently made some depth-cueing related bug fixes. Please try the very latest daily build and see if you still get this problem. If you still do then please use Help->Report a Bug to send us a bug report which will automatically include detailed information about the system you're using.</div><div><br><blockquote type="cite"><div><font face="Calibri, Verdana, Helvetica, Arial"><span style="font-size:11pt"> I’d appreciate any comment or explanation from Chimera people; and what is the best way to overcome this problem?</span></font></div></blockquote><br></div><div>An alternative to ray tracing is to turn on "glossy lighting" (from the Lighting tab of the Side View). That may look good enough for what you want and works with Chimera's non-raytraced image saving.</div><div><br></div><div>--Eric</div><br></body></html>