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Known Participant
February 24, 2024
Question

Graphic (card) rendition horrendousaly slow (Nvidia Quadro P1000 4gb v.31.0.15.5161)

  • February 24, 2024
  • 4 replies
  • 1244 views

Graphic (card) rendition horrendousaly slow (Nvidia Quadro P1000 4gb v.31.0.15.5161)

If for instance I just opened my catalog of 70 raw files in total
(I exported the  collection from my main catalog LR Classic v.13.2)
to see if that could reveal a problem from it)

and want to zoom into image in Developping module, or opening the window to show me the version of LR, it can hang for minutes before ...
same with other editing...

My PC is below 50% in every thing (memory etc)

I am professional since 30 years, also since adobe LR1 and before, using adobe daily,

and am ALWAYS PLAGED(!) by recuring, AWFULL slowness.

Do I really have to switch to Mac ?

(HP ZBook Studio x360 G5  32Ram  2xSSD 4K)

Over the years I have spent months with tweeking and study all kinds of finetuning hacks for improoving speed. (even reinstalling, dedicated OS, ETC, new catalogs etc. MADNING).

This topic has been closed for replies.

4 replies

GoldingD
Legend
February 24, 2024

Please post in a reply a screenshot of /preferences/performance/

 

example:

 

 

dj_paige
Legend
February 24, 2024

I would expect the performance from a 7 year old video card to be poor in Lightroom Classic 13.2. I agree the best thing to do would be to disable the card.

Known Participant
March 26, 2024

( Thank You. Just for information, had developped above...  ... and for pehaps any feedback again from You ?

I'm already back and took a chance with ChatGBT4, that recommends

(after many correlated aspects I asked about)

"In summary, disabling the integrated Intel UHD GPU and relying on the dedicated Quadro P1000 for Lightroom (and Photoshop) is a reasonable approach."

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 24, 2024

I see in the specs this is a dual graphics machine. Dual GPUs may conflict and is a known problem.

 

The standard advice is to completely disable the integrated GPU. See section 4 here:

https://helpx.adobe.com/lightroom-classic/kb/troubleshoot-gpu.html 

Known Participant
March 26, 2024

Copilot pretends :

  • The HP ZBook Studio x360 G5 is indeed a powerful mobile workstation.
  • However, it does not have dual GPUs (Graphics Processing Units). Instead, it relies on a single dedicated GPU (the Quadro P1000) for its graphics processing needs.

 

  • The follow-up recommendation about disabling the graphics card GPU in Lightroom (LR) is relevant but not directly tied to the dual GPU concept.
  • Dual GPUs can indeed cause conflicts in certain software applications. However, the Quadro P1000 in the ZBook Studio x360 G5 is a single GPU, so this specific issue doesn’t apply here.

 

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
March 26, 2024

@DonkeyPhotez 

 

The specs from hp clearly state that it has an integrated Intel UHD GPU, in addition to the Quadro. That is the problem.

 

Almost all laptops sold today have dual GPUs. That works well for simple consumer applications that just send data downstream one way, but for advanced applications that use the GPU for actual data processing it will often cause conflicts.

kglad
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 24, 2024

in the future, to find the best place to post your message, use the list here, https://community.adobe.com/

p.s. i don't think the adobe website, and forums in particular, are easy to navigate, so don't spend a lot of time searching that forum list. do your best and we'll move the post (like this one has already been moved) if it helps you get responses.



<"moved from using the community bugs">