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I just installed Adobe Premiere Pro CC on my desktop, which has Intel Core i7, 3.20 GHz, 16 GB of RAM, and double video card on it. This is an Alienware Aurora ALX from 2011 with Windows 7 Home Premium. I've imported all the videos I need and once I start editing, about three minutes into working, it turns off one of the monitors. I have two monitors hooked up and one of them loses signal--it literally says the monitor has "no signal," which can't be true because I never touched the computer. So I tried unplugging and plugging back in, still no difference. And now when I reopen Premier Pro CC, not only does one of the two monitors go black, but the computer freezes. It's done this five times now and the only way to get the machine going is to turn it off manually by pressing the power button. I can't get past using the program for more than five minutes max before this crash occurs.
Is this a video card issue? A different hardware problem? Is it the program? What can I do to overcome this issue? I have multiple projects I've got to work on and if I knew I'd run into this problem, I probably would not have purchased the program... I'd be grateful for help/solution from someone!
Especially as you say you've a "double" video card ... please list the specs on that card. It occurs to me that an outside possibility is the card is overheating.
Neil
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Hi volfgangamadeus,
I am sorry about this annoying issue.
Is this a video card issue?
I have a strong feeling that it is.
What is the make/model of your GPUs? Which version of display drivers have you installed?
Thanks,
Kulpreet Singh
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Thank you for your help, Kulpreet and Neil!
I just looked under Device Manager and I see two sets of "NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460." I hope that's the right GPU (sorry I'm a computer noob). And I believe the guy who fixed my computer at the shop said the drivers are up to date on the video cards. He also mentioned that I don't necessarily need two cards on my computer. I just looked inside my computer and I see a little golden bridge connecting the two cards. Would it help if I disconnected and just used one video card? Would this positively or negatively affect my computer's performance?
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The bridge between the two cards perhaps puts them in SLI mode, which is not always recommended for PrPro, and multiple video cards can sometimes be an issue.
But the main thing ... those 460's are ancient cards and have only 336 CUDA cores, plus an old internal code architecture that's not supported in the Adobe video apps these days. They aren't really of much if any use. You need new cards but then, what's the specs on the rest of that computer?
Neil
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Neil, I recently received this for free from a friend of mine:
Do you think it'll help for me to take out one of the video cards? If not, is it easy to install a video card on my own? I would be more than willing to order a new compatible video card, if you have a suggestion. I will be editing a lot of videos... I shoot using Sony RX100 Mark III, which shoots 1080p in 60 fps.
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It's very easy to swap out cards from a desktop computer. There's plenty of YouTube demo videos on how to do it.
Neil
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Neil, I've never done an upgrade myself before. Do you have any recommendation on a video card I can purchase? I'm pretty sure I can fit it in myself. What would I need to know in order to know it's compatible? Thank you for your time.
BTW, I just pulled out one of the video cards because Premiere Pro CC crashed again, which crashed the computer. When I took one of them out, the card was HOT as hell.
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Wow... I've been editing for the last 15 min nonstop and it is NOT crashing. Never gone this long before. Like I mentioned in the previous post, I took out one of the two video cards and it is running SMOOTHLY. Maybe it got too hot inside the computer with the two cards? I will keep editing and report back tomorrow. I might have found the solution! Keeping my fingers crossed...
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Neil, thank you for your original suggestion about the double video cards overheating--you were right on the dot. I've been editing the last two nights with just a single video card and NO PROBLEM so far. Super ecstatic that I don't have to spend extra $$. Thanks again for your help.
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Always glad to help. The whole editing thing is a continuous learning experience. Year after year ... lol
Neil
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Especially as you say you've a "double" video card ... please list the specs on that card. It occurs to me that an outside possibility is the card is overheating.
Neil
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May I re-up this thread -- I have been encountering this issue since a couple of days ago after a 15 hour editing session, second monitor turns off before premiere pro crashing. Does anyone possibly have a solution for me?
GPU: 2070 Super (Drivers up to date via Nvidia Geforce Experience)
Procie : I7-10700K
Ram: 16Gb
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I've had this a couple times with the public beta version, but not the shipping one.
Game-ready or studio drivers?
Neil
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Game Ready Drivers I believe
Pat
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Hi Pat,
Sorry about the poor experience. Have you tried installing the latest Studio driver for your GPU & checked if it's working properly?
Thanks,
Sumeet
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I have the same problem. But my crashes happen occasionally like once or twice a day. I have a single GPU.
CPU: i7-8700
RAM: 32GB
GPU: MSI RTX3080
Mobo: Asus Prime 370-P
Gfx driver type: Studio driver
I have a 4 monitor setup. Let me know what I should do to fix the issue.