Skip to main content
Participant
February 12, 2018
Question

Premiere Pro not utilizing my laptops Radeon Pro Card

  • February 12, 2018
  • 1 reply
  • 982 views

Hey all,

So my work got me a Dell Precision 7520 to edit on, which has a Radeon Pro WX 4130. I've been editing some light projects with it and it's been fine, but on my latest project I had some more intense work going into it and I noticed it was rendering very slowly. So I went to check and see if Mercury Playback was enabled and it's currently set to 'Software Only' with the drop down grayed out so I can't set it to utilize OpenCL rendering like I would assume my WX 4130 would support. Any ideas on how to fix this?

My Laptop has '2' graphics cards because of the Integrated Graphics on the Intel chip (Intel HD Graphics 630), so I think Premiere is using that as a primary graphics chip. The laptop is supposed to have 'swappable graphics' under the settings, but no matter what I set my performance mode to, it doesn't seem to take advantage of the Radeon card.

I tried disabling the 630 via device manager, which did then give me the option to enable OpenCL, but Premiere crashes almost immediately after I enable it.

So is there something I'm missing here?

[Moderator note: moved to best forum.]

This topic has been closed for replies.

1 reply

Legend
February 12, 2018

That is all due to a Windows installation that requires the Intel UHD Graphics to be enabled at all times for Windows itself to function properly, and the fact that Premiere Pro does not currently support switchable graphics at all.

Bill Gehrke
Inspiring
February 13, 2018

Randall,

1.  Does this mean that any laptop processor that has an integrated Intel 600 series GPU will have this problem?

2.  Is there any commonality you can see between this Precision 7520 and the Surface Pro problems?

3.  Would rolling back to an earlier version of Premiere be a possible solution, what version of Premiere dropped this capability?

Legend
February 13, 2018

Bill,

Any system - laptop or desktop - with any integrated Intel HD or UHD Graphics (any series) will have this problem, if the system has no provision whatsoever to completely disable the integrated Intel graphics in the BIOS/EFI and something is connected to the video-out port(s) that are associated with the integrated Intel graphics.

And only the CC (2013), 2014 and 2015.0 through 2015.2 versions supported swappable graphics. Unfortunately, only the original CC (2013) release is still available through the Adobe CC app; none of the other versions are available any longer anywhere (at least as far as the Adobe Creative Cloud downloads are concerned).