Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Since premiere version 25.0. it is eating up my whole ethernet connection to load footage(?) or to do nothing at all.
I get very large files downloaded onto my NAS on a daily basis and I edit them directly on the NAS that is connected to the same router as my PC. This has been working just fine for years but with the last update, when I drag a video into premiere, it immediately starts loading something which completely maxes out my ethernet connection and rendering any other internet usage on the PC impossible. Now, if that was only happening during the peak file generation process, I would understand, but it doesn't stop there. For no apparent reason with no actions going on inside premiere and without me doing anything it is still loading stuff through my ethernet. That even happens when I'm done editing and I send the file to media encoder. Premiere is still going nuts while ME only draws 50-200mbits. I can even close premiere to get rid of the problem which changes nothing about the rendering process or anything, but also if I don't close PP at some undefined point it just stops loading things and calms back down to 0 mbits - but I have no way of knowing what it is that causes it.
I can tell it is bottlenecking at my 1 gigabit router because my motherboard does have 2.5gig ethernet.
Now I have absolutely no trust in this ever getting changed or fixed (especially given that even the most basic things such as the masking feature inside PP have been horrendously abysmal since forever) but is there a way to limit the bandwidth that PP is using?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
@HardyIV The only thing I can think it might be is the automatic transcription, if you have that turned on to transcribe all the clips in your project. Check in Preferences > Transcription to see if that is turned on. You would also see it in the Progress panel while it is happening.
If it's not that, I'm not sure what else in Premiere Pro it could be. Can you open Task Manager and set up a column to show network speed by process, and see that it's coming from Premiere Pro or something else? Thanks
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Thanks for your quick reply.
The automatic transcription is not turned on.
I did all my checks with task manager and it has always been PP.
To recreate and narrow it down I took another smaller file and saw how it did the thing during the peak file generation and then a second time after dropping the clip into a sequence without any indicator for how long and why this is going on. Playing back the video has reasonable ethernet usage. I can't seem to recreate the behavior when it's happening during export in AME with PP open.