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Inspiring
April 27, 2017
Answered

Minimum System Requirements.

  • April 27, 2017
  • 1 reply
  • 2046 views

Hello, to start off here is a link to the PC that i am building:

https://www.scan.co.uk/3xs/shared/4c8b51af-e549-4295-bca0-01a22b9264dc

The question is, will this PC run premiere pro cc? i have looked at the system requirements page that adobe suggests, however i couldn't see the processor or graphics card that i have selected among the list the adobe provides. This computer is a top spec AMD PC so i imagine that it will run fine. However when spending this much money there is no harm in double checking. Another question is, is a sound card necessary? the motherboard will come with the sound outputs i need for my speaker setup and as far as i can tell the card itself isnt needed. (yet adobe say a card is necessary) Im feeling a little confused at this point and need some advise. please help!

Thank you,

Charlie

Motherboards

Asus PRIME X370-PRO, Aura lighting, SLI & CrossFire

AMD CPUs and Overclocking

AMD Ryzen 7 1800X, Zen, 8-core with SMT, 3.6GHz, 4GHz Turbo [Stock - CPU left at default operating frequency]

CPU Coolers

Corsair Hydro Series H110i - 280mm AIO liquid cooler

Memory

32GB (2x16GB) Corsair DDR4 Vengeance LPX 2400MHz

Graphics Card

8GB Asus GTX 1080 STRIX ADVANCED GAMING, 1670MHz, 2560 Cores, 10000MHz GDDR5X - GeForce GTX VR Ready [Single card]

Storage - Solid State Drives - PCIe

256GB Samsung SM961, PCIe Gen x4, NVMe, up to 3100MB/s Read, 1400MB/s Write, 330K IOPS

Storage - Hard Disk Drives

System Drives - These drives have been hand-picked as system drives as they typically have a higher spindle speed and cache and as such offer greater performance for use in more demanding applications. [2TB Seagate FireCuda SSHD]

Sound Cards

Not Selected

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer RoninEdits

when liquid coolers became popular there weren't really any good air coolers that could compete, and the popularity with AIO's has mostly stuck. but there are large air coolers now that can come close and beat some AIO liquid coolers. coolers like the noctua d14 or d15 are such coolers, and they can actually be quieter since noctua has some of the quietest fans and they have no pump noise. if you are going for extreme overclock, then liquid will do better. but extreme overclocks aren't recommended for a stable production machine.

ryzen cpu's are built different than intel cpu's, they benefit more from higher speed memory. its good to try and get it running 2666-3000, or even higher.

sshd has a very small flash cache, only data in that cache will be faster than a normal hdd. generally with video editing we deal with way too much data to fit in the sshd cache, so normally there is no performance gain and therefore its not worth the extra cost.

this system would be able to game and handle productivity software. most games only use 2-4 cpu cores, so 8 cores on ryzen will be plenty. the video card needs will vary depending on the game, target fps and resolution. the only weakness ryzen has for gaming is high fps for high refresh rate monitors. some games in that scenario need an intel cpu to get those high fps above 120...

1 reply

RoninEdits
Inspiring
April 27, 2017

the audio chip on the motherboard will work fine. it will count as a sound card, as far as the software is concerned.

i would try to avoid liquid cooling, they are more troublesome to replace and risk the chance of leaking fluid and destroying other parts. the noctua NH-D15 SE-AM4 is a very large air cooler, it will handle medium-to-high overclocks as well. the website you linked offers the smaller noctua cooler, it might be ok if you aren't going to overclock.

the gtx 1080 is a bit overkill for adobe software and your setup. if you don't have other software that needs the gtx 1080, a gtx 1060 6gb or 1070 would be more reasonable.

ram speeds can be helpful for ryzen cpu's, so you may want to look for at least ddr4-3000. the corsair lpx kits seem to be compatible with am4/ryzen, but you may also want to check the motherboard's memory qvl on asus support website. there will be limits for how fast the memory can run on ryzen, depending on how many sticks of ram are installed and capacity, so you might not be able to reach ddr4-3000 speeds in some configs with some memory kits.

for storage there are several ways to setup drives. if your active projects are small enough, you could use a 500gb samsung 960 m.2 for everything, then use a hdd for backups and archived projects. some people like to isolate the sata ssd os/boot drive for easier drive image backups and restores. the seagate firecuda sshd you have listed isn't going to be very helpful, i would just go with the regular hdd for less.

johnb26924339
Participating Frequently
April 27, 2017

I just did the Corsair 3000 Dominator RAM with Ryzen 1800x and x370 Pro, only to find out the memory speed won't go past 2400, despite being approved on Asus QVL. I'd personally go with a different RAM.

Totally agree about avoiding water cooling (Noctua NH-D15 all the way) and going with the 500GB 960 M.2.  Don't go 250. You only have 1 NVMe slot on that board and it's your fastest speed. Don't waste that opportunity with 250GB.

I'm getting great sound from this mobo (nice audio enhancements). I do a lot of audio recording so tested that right away. No sound card needed.