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aTomician
Inspiring
May 6, 2021
Answered

feedback on Dell Precision 3640 for editing

  • May 6, 2021
  • 3 replies
  • 1849 views
Hello, would appreciate some opinions on the below spec.  I mostly edit 4K video in Premiere as well as a lot of work in Photoshop & After Effects.  I also use ffmpeg and imagemagick a fair bit.
 
Dell Precision 3640 Tower
MT - Core I9 10900K 3.7 GHz - VPro - 32 GB - SSD 512 GB
 
Any thoughts or concerns?  The processor seems fairly good looking at benchmarks - https://www.pugetsystems.com/pic_disp.php?id=61386
 
Would really appreciate knowing if anyone has good / bad experience with this.
This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer RjL190365

Many thanks for taking the time to reply to me, really appreciated!

 

Part of the reason I wanted to get feedback on the spec was to check that it would work long term and make sure there weren't known problems with any of the hardware.  I very much doubt that my company would buy a new GPU in a few months time, so I'd rather ask for a better GPU now - the PC can be customised through Dell, we haven't purchased it yet.

 

Below are the GPU's available as standard for this machine, would any of these be a good choice or what do you have in mind when you refer to a "GPU that is a better match for the CPU" - should I look for a dedicated GPU separately?  I've gone through so many benchmarking tables and tests that I honestly feel confused about what really is best!!  I don't want to go overboard and overspend but I do want to be able to do my job efficiently.

 

 

 

 


For that system I would recommend the next GPU choice up from that P2200 (the default selection for your system), the Quadro RTX 4000. The RTX 5000 is even better, but it also costs a lot more money. And this is all because you're purchasing the upgrade from Dell and having them install it for you. Don't go with the P420 or the P620 as they both perform worse than a GeForce GTX 1050 Ti.

 

The Radeon Pro GPUs in that table are out of consideration at this time as Adobe software still performs relatively poorly with OpenCL (as opposed to CUDA, whose support is restricted to Nvidia GPUs).

3 replies

aTomician
aTomicianAuthor
Inspiring
May 7, 2021

Tried to edit my post but I can't, it keeps telling me to correct some non-existent errors, so

 

EDIT: GPU - NVIDIA Quadro P2200 - 5 GB GDDR5X SDRAM

Regards, aTomician
Legend
May 7, 2021

That GPU is doable, although aging and is a tad slower than a 6 GB GeForce GTX 1060 (the GPU that that Quadro P2200 is based on) due to its narrower memory bandwidth (160 bits instead of the 192 bits of the regular GTX 1060). The release of the Studio Drivers for newer GeForces renders the lower-end discrete desktop Quadros redundant. As a result, except for mobile chips, development has effectively ceased for lower-end discrete Quadro/workstation GPUs. This means that there will be no more new Quadros or workstation GPUs priced under $1000 USD, beginning with the Turing architecture that was introduced in 2018 (where the Quadro RTX 4000 is the bottom of the line for that series), while the new Ampere architecture has ditched the Quadro branding completely and is restricted to the top-end models (such as what is now simply called the RTX A8000). The lower-end Quadros will remain on the same old Pascal architecture until Nvidia announces their EOL and legacy support status at some future date.

Legend
May 6, 2021

You did not specify a GPU. Are you going to get a discrete GPU (graphics card) with that PC? Or are you going to just go with the CPU's integrated Intel UHD Graphics 630?

Participant
May 7, 2021

Hopefully you have one left over or picked out, because unless you just found $2,000, GPU is gone bye bye for maybe 6 months.

 

I also like your pugetsystems chart. It makes me feel good that a i9-10900k, even with 10 cores able to push 5.3ghz, although I am fairly certain that Dell doesnt air cool or for a second, water cool, and my old ryzen 7 3700X holds its own.

 

It's also good to know other tech heads, and find a way out of the deep GPU hole. I don't game much, but I do love premiere for making clips of my drone journeys, and upgrading to an evga 3070 made everything so buttery smooth. I've still got a 3060ti OC and a 3080, but it might be sold, my friends and I are trying to get our hands on as many as possible and sell them for whatever it cost us, not a penny more. So far, unless you can write a decent python code to autocheck and add to cart and checkout on amazon without you having to actually be there is the best way to be an awesome editor/creator/gamer. Dell Precisions are nice, and you've got a decent ram count, a boot SSD that might need a data drive, but as far as the computer itself, I would say, unless you're getting a gpu, don't worry as much about your processor. There's still reputable companies that have pre-builts and decent graphics cards. If that is your tower, and you're still holding onto a 2080ti or something from the last computer, solid choice.

aTomician
aTomicianAuthor
Inspiring
May 11, 2021

@defaultz7jplbx3ozhy  really appreciate your response, but don't think I quite understand what you're saying.  When you refer to GPU is gone for 6 months, not sure what you meant?  also why not worry about the processor unless I'm getting a GPU?

Regards, aTomician
Ann Bens
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 6, 2021

Moved to hardware forum.