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Jqke
Legend
January 30, 2022
Beantwortet

CPU/GPU usage while rendering

  • January 30, 2022
  • 3 Antworten
  • 9046 Ansichten

I'm rendering a video that is heavy on effects and layers + using 3d elements. The render time shows 5 hours and 43 minutes remaining after 7 minutes of rendering, which sort of makes sense, but it seems just a little longer than I would expect. 

 

My main question though is how can I get my CPU or GPU to be utilized more during renders? My CPU is only running at around 26% capacity and my GPU at 7%. 


I was able to get a new GPU recently (RTX 3060 Ti), and it should improve render times from a 1660 SUPER.. right? Especially if I use GPU acceleration... My render times are slower with my current GPU while using GPU acceleration, so my secondary question is, will this new GPU actually speed up my render times? 

 

Please also let me know after all this information if 5 1/2 hours of render times does make sense, because I don't really know if it does or doesn't.

 

My system:

Ryzen 5 5600X

GTX 1660 SUPER (upgrading soon to a 3060 Ti)

32 GB RAM

1 TB WD SN550 NVME M.2 SSD

Using AE CC2022 & ME CC2022

 

 

 

UPDATE:

Render crashed, now the project is taking forever to load the preview. This just started happening in the past couple days. My last render took around 15 hours, this did not used to happen before while equally heavy effects on projects.

 

The project has an imported .aec file from Cinema 4D, so a png sequence (duplicated 3 times with effects on different layers) and a camera. 

9 Adjustment Layers (including 3rd party effects, one is RSMB)

2 Optical Flares

5 Solids with Trapcode Plugins

Around 5 other things like a black solid, some blurs and a couple video clips using 3d layers. 

Dieses Thema wurde für Antworten geschlossen.
Beste Antwort von Warren Heaton

As far as After Effects goes, you're likely to see faster render times by upgrading your CPU instead of your GPU.

 

Puget Systems publishes some great articles as well as benchmark tests to compare your setup to other setups.

 

This blog covers good information about performance as well as a link to Adobe's Multi-frame Rendering benchmark project.

 

Equiloud's AE Performance Test project is dated, but there are numerous comments from users about hardware setup and render time in the comments.

 

The After Effects user guide has helpful information to review as well.

3 Antworten

nubnubbud
Inspiring
January 31, 2022

if you're not using rotobrush, I would suggest using CS6! it's blazing fast! It was back when Adobe's financial incentive was driven by indie artists, so it's slim, effective, and great at all the things a good editor needs, and even comes with a fully usable demo version of Mocha, for real deep tracks!

Jqke
JqkeAutor
Legend
January 31, 2022

Thank you for the reply, but if I have the CC suite, do I have access to CS6 as well or do I have to buy it seperately?

~Jake
Warren Heaton
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 31, 2022

CS6 is officially discontinued.  

 

Also, it lacks the under-the-hood improvements that have been made to After Effects.

Warren Heaton
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 30, 2022

As far as After Effects goes, you're likely to see faster render times by upgrading your CPU instead of your GPU.

 

Puget Systems publishes some great articles as well as benchmark tests to compare your setup to other setups.

 

This blog covers good information about performance as well as a link to Adobe's Multi-frame Rendering benchmark project.

 

Equiloud's AE Performance Test project is dated, but there are numerous comments from users about hardware setup and render time in the comments.

 

The After Effects user guide has helpful information to review as well.

Jqke
JqkeAutor
Legend
January 31, 2022

If I'm not wrong the 5600X is one of the best CPUs for Adobe software. Is it worth it to upgrade to a 5900X later down the road? Honestly a 12900k probably isn't worth it for the amount of money it would cost to get a motherboard as well as the chip.

~Jake
nubnubbud
Inspiring
October 16, 2022

So I should just get a better processor to get a higher score in PugetBench? I still don't understand how people are getting double the scores with the same processor.

 

If it isn't the processor that is causing low scores, then what is?


it's adobe.
also their programs can't take advantage of modern hardware. get the fastest single core score card you can... basically ignore the GPU, and there you go it's as good as it gets.

Community Expert
January 30, 2022

Maybe try going to edit/purge all memory and disk cache and see if it helps.