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Participating Frequently
August 13, 2023
Question

Video card not stable during rendering

  • August 13, 2023
  • 2 replies
  • 801 views

Hello, I am facing a strange problem. During rendering, sometimes my video card worked and sometimes it didnt.

I used 4 images during the project. The sizes of these images were 1920x1080, 6157x3107, 10772x7616 and 13440x7559.

In 1920x1080 and 6157x3107 images, the graphics card worked and rendered. But every time a 10772x7616 image appeared on the screen, the graphics card stopped rendering.

A more strange situation occurred in the 13440x7559 image. In the parts where I zoomed into the image, the video card rendered, but when the zoom ended, when the 13440x7559 image was completely on the screen, it stopped rendering.

If the video card was incompatible with the PC or a setting in Premiere Pro was wrong, it would not render at 1920x1080 and 6157x3107, but it did.

The productions of these images are exactly the same, the effects I used on the images are exactly the same, but the sizes are different and as far as I understand, my video card stops rendering when the size increases.

Is there a setting for this? The render took 4 hours and my processor worked at 100%, its frustrating that the render takes 4 hours when it would take 15 minutes if my graphics card would join the render.

If someone who knows can help me, I would appreciate it.

Note: my video card is RTX 3050 Ti Laptop.

This topic has been closed for replies.

2 replies

Kevin-Monahan
Community Manager
Community Manager
August 14, 2023

Hi @Fischer11,

I saw this message. It sounds like you are using graphics that are too large for your video card to handle. For projects like yours, I'd go with using images no more than twice the frame size. 4K images should work fine, but try not to use anything with a larger frame size than that. This little rule of thumb has helped me over the years. Try it and let us know if your workflow improves. 

 

Thanks,
Kevin

Kevin Monahan - Sr. Community and Engagement Strategist – Adobe Pro Video and Audio
Fischer11Author
Participating Frequently
August 14, 2023

Hello Kevin Monahan.

As you said, when I drew and ran it in 4K, the graphics card was included in the render, thank you. I have a question: can I render 8K on a computer with better specs and that can handle 8K rendering without problems, or does Premiere Pro only allow 4K rendering?

Kevin-Monahan
Community Manager
Community Manager
August 15, 2023

Hi @Fischer11,

Thanks for the message.

can I render 8K on a computer with better specs and that can handle 8K rendering without problems

Yes, it is possible. 

 

Thanks,
Kevin

Kevin Monahan - Sr. Community and Engagement Strategist – Adobe Pro Video and Audio
Legend
August 13, 2023

It has a lot to do with the amount of discrete graphics RAM. Your GPU simply does not have enough graphics RAM to render any higher-res content. In fact, your 10772x7616 content requires far more than 16 GB of discrete graphics RAM just to hardware render at all.

Fischer11Author
Participating Frequently
August 13, 2023

Hello, thank you for the answer. My computer has 32 gb ram and my processor is 11th i7-11800H 2,30 GHz. Are you absolutely sure that this is related to ram, could it be related to a setting?

MyerPj
Community Expert
Community Expert
August 13, 2023

Do you actually need such big pictures? You might try cutting those down a bit (quite a bit) in Photoshop or such.