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Participant
December 6, 2017
Question

Using SSD to export/render faster?

  • December 6, 2017
  • 1 reply
  • 6207 views

I recently bought a Samsung T5 because I've seen that people have been able to speed up their render and export process, but I haven't noticed any difference when working on my projects. I have the footage and premiere pro projects in my drive, but it still doesn't show much of a difference when exporting. Is there a correct way to go about using an SSD to speed up workflow? I also use a MacBook Pro Late 2016 Touch Bar by the way if that helps. Thank you!

[Moderator note: moved to best forum.]

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    1 reply

    Community Expert
    December 6, 2017

    To render, it is more important that you have a GPU compatible with the Mercury Playback Engine acceleration, either with CUDA, OpenCL or Metal in the exclusive case of Mac, because rendering is a very complex process that does not require so much disk speed but rather GPU + CPU power. The SSD is efficient to read files faster, start the operating system in less time, open applications, etc. Or maybe if you use it as Media Cache Files to accelerate the previous ones.



    Here you can check Adobe's white list of compatible video cards with Premiere Pro

    https://helpx.adobe.com/en/premiere-pro/system-requirements.html

    Byron.
    Participant
    December 6, 2017

    I render with OpenCL. I don't see my video card on the list that you sent me. Any suggestions?

    R Neil Haugen
    Legend
    December 6, 2017

    The GPU is actually used mostly on the effects on the list of GPU Accelerated Effects :

    List of GPU accelerated effects: https://helpx.adobe.com/premiere-pro/using/effects.html

    Outside of those, which are mainly things like Lumetri, Warp, and some others ... many sequences don't involve the GPU hardly at all. https://forums.adobe.com/people/Bill%20Gehrke Bill Gehrke has needed to explain that I don't know how many times on the  Hardware forum and here. His PPBM8 site, and the test of that name, is a very good way to figure out where your rig is doing good, and where it's got issues. With a real-life export out of PrPro while logging apps monitor every subsystem of your computer. Comparing the data there is the one way to find out exactly how your rig stacks up against many, many other computers in each area ... and pointing out where a hardware change is worth doing.

    Neil

    Everyone's mileage always varies ...