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May 26, 2012
Question

Spec workstation for CS 6 video editing

  • May 26, 2012
  • 7 replies
  • 21019 views

Hello Adobe forum!

I'm switching from Mac to PC and need help picking out my workstation. I plan on doing heavy editing on Premiere Pro (6) as well as a healthy amount of work in After effects (6), and my budget hovers around $3000. I will not be doing any assembling myself (gotta go with a turnkey/custom company).

Overall, are these general specs good enough for my needs? Is there anything I need to upgrade? What am I missing?

CPU: Intel® Core™ i7-3930K Six-Core 3.20 GHz

Liquid Cooling Kit 360MM w/ Triple Fan

Motherboard: (SLI/CrossFireX) ASUS P9X79 Intel X79 Chipset

Memory: 32GB (4GBx8) DDR3/1333MHz Quad Channel Memory

Video Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 570 1.2GB

Power Supply: 1,000 Watts

OS/Boot Hard Drive: 120GB Corsair Force GT Series SATA-III 6.0 Gb/s SSD

Other Hard Drives: 4x 1TB SATA-III 6.0Gb/s 32MB Cache 7200RPM HDD (Raid 01)

Optical Drive: Blu-Ray Rewriter

LCD Monitor: 2x 24" Widescreen 1920x1080 ASUS VS247H-P LCD

Thanks so much for your help!

-J

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7 replies

May 26, 2012

Bill--the video card info is good to know.  So theoretically, would the GTX 670 and/or 690 work with this trick/hack?

I'm working with entirely DSLRs, nothing 4k. 

Legend
May 26, 2012

There have been a couple users reporting that the 680 works just fine with the hack.

The 690 might be overkill.

Bill Gehrke
Inspiring
May 26, 2012

I agree with Jim, the 690 is a dual GPU card and you could run into problems.  No dual GPU cards have ever been certified by Adobe.

May 26, 2012

Still learning...!

Bill: In terms of the Graphic card, I only chose not to go with the GTX 670 because it wasn't listed on the Adobe website of supported

GPU Accelerated Graphics Cards for CS 6, and GTX 570 was listed (and is in my budget)(http://www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/products/premiere/cs6/pdfs/compatibiltiy-list-premiere-pro-cs6-only-hw-compatibility.pdf

...scroll down to third page).  Is there something I'm missing?

Also Bill: I only listed "(SLI/CrossFireX)" in front of my Asus P9X79 Intel X79 Chipset motherboard because that's simply the way I copied and pasted it onto my post (I don't know from SLI/CrossfireX, so I intended no specific emphasis).  My pasting error aside, is this motherboard still incompatible with Premiere? http://www.asus.com/Motherboards/Intel_Socket_2011/P9X79/ If so, is the 'Pro' version of this motherboard any more compatible (http://www.asus.com/Motherboards/Intel_Socket_2011/P9X79_PRO/)? Basically, what non-SLI/CrossfireX mobo mode do I need to look for to make sure it operates on Premiere?

Thanks again to everyone. 

Bill Gehrke
Inspiring
May 26, 2012

There is no advantage or no known disadvantage to using a card that is not on the list as long as it is a CUDA card and has 1GB or more video memory  I have the following cards and tested all. 

You are new to the forum so you have not seen many conversations here about using various cards.  All you have to do to use in Premiere, for MPE hardware acceleration, any CUDA card not on Adobe's "certified" list is to add one simple line to the Adobe file "cuda_supported_cards.txt"  Check out the "hack" in these forums.

On your motherboard that one will work fine, just do not install a secord GPU card and hook it up as SLI.  (you can install a second card just not in SLI mode).  What video media do you plan on handling?

You might want to see Harm and my (currently) 882 PPBM5 benchmark results/configurations for ideas of what is good or not so good in hardware configurations.

Message was edited by: Bill Gehrke

Bill Gehrke
Inspiring
May 26, 2012

Another couple of holes!

If I were spending money for a new setup I would go for the latest generation Graphics Card.  The GTX 670 uses less power (170 watts vs 219 watts maximum) therefore it will be less noisy, it is higher performance in MPE than the GTX 570, it has more video memory (2 GB vs. 1.2 GB) and it is the new faster PCIe v 3.0 interface.  Of course it does cost more but it will have a much longer lifetime. 

Also on your motherboard "Motherboard: (SLI/CrossFireX) ASUS P9X79 Intel X79 Chipset".  I hope you are not specifing that motherboard for the (SLI/CrossfireX) capability as Premiere Pro does not operate with that mode.

Harm_Millaard
Inspiring
May 26, 2012

Liquid Cooling Kit 360MM w/ Triple Fan

Why? Your choice of memory indicates that you are not an extreme overclocker, so why the hassle and cost of a liquid cooling set with a three fan radiator, that generates the same amount of noise as three fans and does not cool better than a good third party cooler, all on air.

Maybe this article will give you some ideas: PPBM6 Planning a new system

May 26, 2012

Thank you all for your comments.  This discussion has been very helpful thus far.  To RjL190365's point about the tower case, here's what I was looking at, the "NZXT Switch 810 Hybird Full Tower Gaming Case", http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811146088.

I only listed what I thought were the most pertinent items in terms of basic performance in CS6, so I left out the case (as well as several other items) but this is a valid point I hadn't considered. In your estimation, RjL, does this NZXT case seem ok, or might it still get too cramped?

Also, in regards to the RAID setup, I listed it as RAID 01 because that was the only RAID option for four disks offered by my favored custom makers on their website (despite their lack of RAID options, I'm interested in their price point, which I found to be better than ADK, Puget, Rain, etc., based on my research).  I had originally wanted the four 1 TB disks in a RAID 1+0 setup instead. So, my next question is if, for some reason, I am sent a tower with RAID 01, I will still be able to re-configure my disks to RAID 10 simply enough, correct? And won't need a RAID card to do it?

Again, I appreciate all your guidance and advice.  This process is quite challenging, and I'm grateful for all your PC wisdom.

-J

Legend
May 26, 2012

Actually, RAID 10 has basically the same effect as RAID 01. Only this time, each pair of drives are mirrored first, then the two mirrored pairs are striped together. So, you'll still get the usable capacity from only two disks either way.

If RAID 01 is called a "mirror of striped arrays", then RAID 10 is a "stripe of mirrored arrays".

In other words, any RAID with a "1" in it will automatically steal half of your disks in capacity, so that you'd get only 2TB total usable capacity out of four 1TB disks.

Legend
May 26, 2012

As Bill stated, there are a few holes in the specs of your planned editing PC. Especially in the disk configuration: A RAID 01 is a pair of striped disks that are mirrored to another striped pair. This gives you the speed of a two-disk aid0 but with four disks and the total capacity of only two disks. So, you'd end up with a four-disk setup with only 2TB total capacity.

lasvideo
Inspiring
May 26, 2012

If you are doing this heavy editing professionally, I suggest an external raid array of at least 8TB configured to raid 5. Anyone working for in the biz  will tell you when you are working on client supervised projects with deadlines, the insurance raid 5 gives you is the way to go for fast reliable restoration of media files. If you are just doing stuff for family and friends then raid 0 is fine.

And if you are considering getting a turnkey system, you might also want to shop around and look into Puget Systems. Another solid contender.

Harm_Millaard
Inspiring
May 26, 2012

If you are doing this heavy editing professionally, I suggest an external raid array of at least 8TB configured to raid 5. Anyone working for in the biz  will tell you when you are working on client supervised projects with deadlines, the insurance raid 5 gives you is the way to go for fast reliable restoration of media files. If you are just doing stuff for family and friends then raid 0 is fine.

And if you are considering getting a turnkey system, you might also want to shop around and look into Puget Systems. Another solid contender.

External raid arrays are very slow in comparison to internal PCIe arrays, unless you spend huge amounts of $$$, because affordable external arrays lack the backbone and connect over a single eSATA connection or worse. For a comparison and some background, read Adobe Forums: Raid Performance and Rebuild Issues but also read the articles linked to in that thread.

As to Puget, they may have better prices, but do they have the expertise with Adobe CS6 and video editing in general that ADK has and do they have the same level of service? I doubt that.

I do agree the best approach is to use a dedicated raid controller and a parity raid (better 3 than 5), but then internally.

Bill Gehrke
Inspiring
May 26, 2012

If you really want a great video editing computer assembled, tested and fully supported go to ADK and get a total turnkey real Adobe NLE computer, talk to Eric or Scott.   There are holes in your specs

May 26, 2012

I'm curious what other 'holes' are here besides the disk setup?

Legend
May 26, 2012

The other major hole is that the OP did not specify a case. After all, it is not recommended to run a PC with no tower case whatsoever. And some cases are too cramped on the inside to accommodate all of the components in your planned build (for example, the case that the builder provides might be too cramped from front to rear to even fit a GTX 570 unless two or more hard drives are completely removed from the system). Furthermore, some cases have very poor airflow, causing the internal components of the PC to run significantly hotter than they should.