Skip to main content
michellebriffault
Participant
September 1, 2018
Answered

Will a Geforce GTX 1050 Ti be compatible with Premiere Pro? [Was: Graphics card?]

  • September 1, 2018
  • 14 replies
  • 48897 views

Does anyone know if this graphics card will be compatible with Premiere Pro CC? It's not on the list of recommended specs so I'm not sure if it has to be one of those.

Nvidia Geforce GTX 1050TI 4GB

[Title edited by moderator]

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer Ann Bens

List is not accurate anymore.

If the card has at least 1 gig VRAM it will work.

Dont think mentioned card will be a problem.

14 replies

Participant
July 20, 2019

Yes it works. I just tested now. I had to change the drivers from Gaming to regular drivers, but it worked fine

Participant
August 5, 2019

Hey Cristianablw any chance you can post a link to the driver you used for the 1050TI? Thanks in advance!

Vinay Dwivedi
Adobe Employee
Adobe Employee
August 5, 2019

Use the below one and it will work. Itoo have the  same one.

Inspiring
January 16, 2019

Hi, folks...I've been using the 1050 Ti for several years. I just upgraded my system (in November) to i7-8700/32GB DDR4 RAM and of course new M/B (ASUS PRIME Z390-A). My current experience is that the 1050 Ti is now the bottleneck in my system. It works...but occasionally I have a jittery picture and very occasionally the image goes completely black. The only fix is saving, exiting, reopening PPro. I believe the card is the cause because when experiencing these items I open CAM Desktop and the GPU is showing 100% usage.

I think that the 768 cores and 4GB VRAM are just not enough. I'd love some recommendations from the great people here who could tell me: my inclination is to upgrade, perhaps to RTX 2060 or 2070. 2070 would double my VRAM and increase core count to 2304. 2060 is $150 less (coming soon, not yet released) has 1920 cores, 6GB GDDR6 VRAM.

I guess my questions are: Will I likely get fewer session failures with one of these cards, 2) given that I'm not a gamer, "only" a video editor, will I get enough bang for the buck to spend the extra $150 shekels on the RTX 2070 vs. the 2060, and 3) by making this move, am I significantly future-proofing myself? Thanks...

Jay

R Neil Haugen
Legend
January 16, 2019

Both would be significant upgrades. What's the CPU?

Neil

Everyone's mileage always varies ...
Inspiring
January 17, 2019

Hi, Neil, and thanks for chiming in!

I upgraded my CPU to i7-8700 (from i7-4770K). Decided not to pay the extra shekels for the 8700K because as a non-gamer I don't see any reason to push my system by overclocking. 32G DDR4 RAM. ASUS Prime Z390-A M/B.

I agree that either would be significant, and beyond Premiere current specs (they don't do anything with the ray-tracing and other aspects that differentiate GTX from RTX - yet) but given the pricing of the GTX 10 series beyond my 2016-vintage 1050 Ti and the RTX 1060 and 1070 series...it makes no sense to me to stay in the 10-series space.

The question is whether there's enough significance between the two cards in question to venture up to the higher-priced (and admittedly more powerful) card.

Thanks!

Jay

telecam2
Inspiring
November 17, 2018

My issue is actually more on the Intel driver side on the Dell XPS 15 w/ GTX1050 Ti.  I did a clean install on the Nvidia driver but there is not such an option on the Intel driver who keeps reverting to version .5037 (from .6373) at every Windows update.  And that driver is not playing well at all with CUDA. I checked the "disable win update temporarily" which should keep my system untouched for a month or so...

Mo Moolla
Legend
November 17, 2018

Windows and their incremental "useful" updates lol.

I thank God my PC days are over and the only time I go near windows is for my render farm lol.

Good idea keeping auto updates off but be sure not to miss any important ones

R Neil Haugen
Legend
November 17, 2018

Hey, you aware the number of Mac only issues around here? Ain't no one really being "our friend" right now.

Neil

Everyone's mileage always varies ...
Known Participant
November 17, 2018

If U have the correct files it will work I belive.

telecam2
Inspiring
November 12, 2018

Having a lots of CUDA playback issues (CUDA playback dropping off, black screen after few minutes) with Dell XPS 15 9750 with Nvidia GTX 1050 Ti.  I got it to work reliably with and older GeForce driver (397.93) which I can no longer install because Win 10 64 automatic updates.  The newer GeForce drivers  416.34 and 416.81 (compatible with Win 10 64 Built 17134) have CUDA playback issues with laster version of Premiere Pro CC (Version 13.0.1 (built 13). You can revert your project to Open CL mode which works reliably but much slower export/playback.  Really frustrating with a new machine....

kareng4717791
Participant
December 3, 2018

Same Machine and same issues for me. I don't think its acceptable to have a paid software that doesn't render videos at speeds from this decade on one of the most popular gpu's on the planet right now. If I use it in normal open CL  rendering mode I get all purple and green horizontal lines across the project during any playback or editing process. Its not worth it until there's a fix..... and they seem to be taking their sweet time unfortunately.

Vinay Dwivedi
Adobe Employee
Adobe Employee
December 3, 2018

Hi Karen,

I hope you are on Windows machine with Intel card + NVidia Card on your machine.

NVidia has released a new driver 417.01 on 11/26/18 so please update to that and for Intel and Green/Pink line issue, update the Intel card from below KB link.

Resolution for an issue where green, purple, or pink haze appears in the Source or Program monitors, or the exported fil…

Hope this helps.

//Vinay

zpln_
Participant
September 3, 2018

I use a GTX 960 and Premiere works just fine on it (for the most part -- other areas of my computer could be improved, haha).

michellebriffault
Participant
September 3, 2018

Thanks for the replies everyone.

I bought a computer with a Radeon R7 (and M265) GPU and Premiere started freezing just after starting a project. I was on chat support with Adobe and he said that it wasn't supported by the latest version of Premiere (and could not disable both cards). So before I buy another computer I need to know if it is supported (Hind at Adobe support was no help this time).

So just to clarify:

Similar GPUs to the listed ones will be compatible?

I'm looking at this one (or the original post):

Intel i7-3630QM 16GB Ram Nvidia GeForce GTX 670

Peru Bob
Community Expert
Community Expert
September 3, 2018

Until this thread is marked Correct, everybody reading this thread will post saying that it will work, so as I don't want to be left out:

Yes, it will work. 

Community Expert
September 3, 2018

Exactly jajajajaj

Byron.
juanmario
Participating Frequently
September 2, 2018

michelleb40567155  escribió

Does anyone know if this graphics card will be compatible with Premiere Pro CC? It's not on the list of recommended specs

It does not matter, it fulfills the requirements, to your doubt it is, Yes.

Known Participant
September 2, 2018

Yup

Community Expert
September 2, 2018

Of course, even though it is not on the Adobe Premiere Pro white list it will work, so take it easy and enjoy it.

Byron.