Thread: The right box for Premiere Pro

Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 15
  1. #1 The right box for Premiere Pro 
    Senior Member James McLellan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Center of Jetmania
    Posts
    357
    I am moving everything from Final Cut to Premiere Pro in our lab. I used to purchase $1100 imacs that ran quite fine. The fact that imacs don't support GPU acceleration is making me consider switching to PC. I don't have a ton of background researching the millions of different pc companies. Can anyone recommend the cheapest pc box with gpu acceleration?
    Reply With Quote  
     

  2. #2  
    Senior Member Noel R.'s Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    North Bay, CA
    Posts
    319
    From what I've read a lot of people including myself are building their PC's. Using an intel i7 extreme 3960, 32Gigs of Ram, and GTX 580 graphics cards with 3gigs of memory. This website lists all compatible graphics cards: http://www.adobe.com/products/premie...ck-engine.html . I would make sure you are using a motherboard which can do an SLI configuration with your graphics cards, this way if you ever want to plug in a second GTX 580 card you can and use the horsepower of both cards together.

    Edit: Also make sure you get Windows proffesional and not the home edition, the home edition limits the amount of RAM you can use.
    Last edited by Noel R.; 08-07-2012 at 05:39 PM.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  3. #3  
    Senior Member Cory Petkovsek's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    163
    As a general recommendation, I'd start with Dell. For my own use, I'd build my own system; a clone. If you have a local computer shop, you can go talk with them about building you a clone. Otherwise, Dell will be fine as long as you spec the right system. Get a system that supports 8GB ram or preferably much more, has a decent size chassis so you can upgrade (tower or minitower), 7200rpm or ssd drives only, an Nvidia graphics card on the supported list, and windows 7 pro, 64-bit.
    http://www.dell.com/us/soho/p/deskto...5~0~812538&p=1

    You can also get higher end workstations, some specially designed. But these aren't going to be cheap.
    http://www.reduser.net/forum/showthr...edcine-x+audio

    Cheap and good, go with Dell or a clone.
    Cory Petkovsek
    Corporate Video
    Reply With Quote  
     

  4. #4  
    Senior Member Elsie N's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Posts
    3,035
    I'm gradually putting together a system that I hope will handle 6k Dragon footage in Adobe apps in a serviceable way.

    Asus Sabertooth 990FX mainboard
    AMD FX 8150 8 core Processor
    EVGA GTX 560 Graphics card (336 cuda cores, 256 bit)
    32 GB G-Skil RAM
    750 Watt Power Supply
    OCZ REVO Hybrid Drive (PCIe 4 lane slot) as 1 TB system drive (known to work well as boot drive with ASUS Sabertooth board
    2 WD Black 1.5 TB drives in RAID 0, used for primary storage of work footage
    2 Seagate 1.5 TB LP drives (Low Power) for use as secondary storage
    Single 3 or 4 TB drive for tertiary backup.
    USB 3.0 Docking station for redundant storage

    By watching for Newegg deals, I've so far gotten this system (haven't bought the tertiary drive yet) ready for assembly for about $1500.

    EDIT: Forgot to mention I have downloaded a preview copy of Windows 8. That should work as an operating system until maybe the first of the year before I will have to purchase the release version from MicroSoft.
    Last edited by Elsie N; 08-08-2012 at 08:32 AM.
    One camera is a shoot... two or more is a production.
    L.C. (Elsie) N., omniographer.com, dba nelloProductions, LLC (soon)...looks like a good time to start a business.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  5. #5  
    Senior Member Cory Petkovsek's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    163
    Elsie, Nice setup. Using windows 8 will be "cool", but will make troubleshooting compatibility or stability issues difficult. On your production workstation I'd recommend win7 as we know it's a stable platform. Issues will be your hardware or ppro; which is already two variables. Also I would keep at least your current active project on the ocz revo (with regular backup). That drive will be 3-4 times faster than even your raid.
    Cory Petkovsek
    Corporate Video
    Reply With Quote  
     

  6. #6  
    Senior Member Tom Daigon's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Las Vegas NV
    Posts
    149
    If you get a Dell or HP, get their workstations. I suggest you call ADK and ask for Eric. He knows his stuff and will get you the best system at a reasonable price. He knows computesr AND Adobe software which makes him an invaluable resource.

    http://www.adkvideoediting.com/ Eric Bowen.
    Tom Daigon
    Premiere Pro / After Effects
    HP Z820
    Dulce Pro DQg2 raid
    www.hdshotsandcuts.com
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DxPrG3WUyz8
    Reply With Quote  
     

  7. #7  
    Senior Member Elsie N's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Posts
    3,035
    Quote Originally Posted by Cory Petkovsek View Post
    Elsie, Nice setup. Using windows 8 will be "cool", but will make troubleshooting compatibility or stability issues difficult. On your production workstation I'd recommend win7 as we know it's a stable platform. Issues will be your hardware or ppro; which is already two variables. Also I would keep at least your current active project on the ocz revo (with regular backup). That drive will be 3-4 times faster than even your raid.
    Hi Cory, Can't argue your points on Windows 8 but I have another workstation that can bail me out if things get buggie. My thinking is to allow feedback to both Adobe and Windows which I hope will make both companies work out any compatibility problems before I need the workstation for the larger files we'll have to deal with from the 6k Dragon sensor.

    And as to your point on the Revo Drive, I agree that's where I'll need my active project. But I'm wondering if perhaps some of the Dragon projects might go over a TB in size? That's my thinking in having the two WD drive RAID 0. That is, place the files I'll be working off of onto that and pull them into the project located on the REVO. But then again, that still leaves the SATA III bottleneck.

    Perhaps I can identify the files I'll need for a sequence, then as you suggest put a working copy of only those files onto the REVO for speed. As long as they will re-link from wherever permanently stored when I go back later to those files, all should work fine.

    But as you can tell, I'm working through the process of how to proceed.

    Thanks for your input.
    One camera is a shoot... two or more is a production.
    L.C. (Elsie) N., omniographer.com, dba nelloProductions, LLC (soon)...looks like a good time to start a business.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  8. #8  
    Senior Member James McLellan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Center of Jetmania
    Posts
    357
    Thanks Elsie,

    your post is very specific which gives me a point to compare with. I will say this, with all the talk of 'I can build a pc with the same specs for half the price as a mac' going around I had thought I would find some better bargains. For me, the budget for the lab runs out at 1250 per machine which is close to the numbers you are talking about. I will continue to research things. Cheers.

    Only thing is the GTX 560 does not seem to support GPU acceleration in PPro. Am I right?
    Reply With Quote  
     

  9. #9  
    Senior Member Elsie N's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2009
    Posts
    3,035
    Quote Originally Posted by James McLellan View Post
    Thanks Elsie, your post is very specific which gives me a point to compare with. I will say this, with all the talk of 'I can build a pc with the same specs for half the price as a mac' going around I had thought I would find some better bargains. For me, the budget for the lab runs out at 1250 per machine which is close to the numbers you are talking about. I will continue to research things. Cheers. Only thing is the GTX 560 does not seem to support GPU acceleration in PPro. Am I right?
    James, I'm not sure about the GTX 560 being "officially" supported, but there's an easy fix for that that only takes a few seconds to download and a few seconds more to install into Premiere. (I think there is a separate one for AE but I'm not sure.) I'll edit this post when I find the link. In the meantime (I hope Cory doesn't mind my copying and pasting his post in another thread I just read) here's the post Cory made of his setup and how to separate different functions out. I found it useful and maybe you will too.

    Cory's post:

    Here is my setup: 4x256GB SSD RAID 5 - OS/Program files, Project files, media for smaller projects, and exports 500GB SATA - Temp files (%TEMP%, %TMP% are set here), Adobe Media Cache files 7.5TB SATA RAID 5 - RED Media Other drives for backup I separated it like this based on testing of optimal performance for my setup and workflows. You will need to do the same to get the optimal. A lot of media conformation works by reading from a media drive, writing a file to the temp folder, then moving it to the media cache. I would not bother with a dedicated drive for exports. Exporting is processor and disk-read bound, not write bound; its writing is the slowest process. I would do this: SSD - OS/Program files, TEMP and TMP environment variables (default) INT HDD1 (larger) Active projects and media INT HDD2 (smaller) Less active projects and media, and all adobe apps media cache. EXT HDD Inactive projects and media, backup You could experiment with moving TEMP/TMP and media cache all to the SSD or all to HDD2 by clearing the cache and temp files and observing the behavior and time of conforming the media for a large project. Exporting will probably be the same across the board. I arranged mine as such because conforming red footage caused such a high disk queue on my raid that it was giving my raid controller problems. Moving TEMP/TMP and media cache to its own drive alleviated this.

    Cory

    EDIT: Here's the link to the website that has written the script that updates PPro's card cache file to recognize cards not currently having gone through the recognition process. The download link is about 2/3 of the way down the page. http://www.studio1productions.com/Ar...miereCS5-2.htm
    Last edited by Elsie N; 08-09-2012 at 06:56 AM.
    One camera is a shoot... two or more is a production.
    L.C. (Elsie) N., omniographer.com, dba nelloProductions, LLC (soon)...looks like a good time to start a business.
    Reply With Quote  
     

  10. #10  
    Senior Member Cory Petkovsek's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2010
    Location
    San Diego
    Posts
    163
    Quote Originally Posted by Elsie N View Post
    I hope Cory doesn't mind my copying and pasting his post in another thread I just read
    Here's the direct link with formatting that's easier to read:
    http://www.reduser.net/forum/showthr...=1#post1047646
    Cory Petkovsek
    Corporate Video
    Reply With Quote  
     

Posting Permissions
  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts