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October 7, 2012
Question

FASTEST 4K rendering system for CS6 - Dual XEON or GPU (NVIDIA Cuda Cores) ?

  • October 7, 2012
  • 4 replies
  • 47648 views

Hi, I need to build a new POWERFUL video editing machine for After Effects/Premiere and could need some input as I am low on time.

The machine must be really fast in video editing/rendering, and I will be working both 1920x1080, 3840x2160 (24p) and 4K x 4K resolution projects. I work with a lot of timelapse, meaning a lot of large frames, and also computer generated frames inbetween key frames, eg. to slow down footage (Using both Adobes own, and different 3rd party engines for this).

First, I work in Adobe Creative Suite CS6 (After Effect and Premiere).

1. Should I choose a dual XEON R5 system (2630/2640), or is a fast i7 3960/3930K sufficient?

Higher end XEON E5 cpu's are really expensive, and as I understand from some sources, current models are "old" and should be replaced anytime soon, but I don't think I have time to wait. I know EVGA/ASUS have dual i7 motherboards, but are there any software (Adobe CS6) able to utilize dual i7 cpus as of today? I am unsure if there is any point in buying such a motherboard for my purpose.

2. I know some processes can be done by GPU. And I am tempted to buy the new GTX690, (and mod/hack Adobe info files so it becomes compatible with AE/PR), even if I know only a single GPU is currently supported in Adobe CS6 (giving me 1536 cuda cores), due to the possible use of the new NVIDIA hardware encoding system on newer NVIDIA cards, that may be possible (hopefully) to utilize in Adobe CS6 in the future. Or at least stand-alone.

3. What would be the overall fastest in rendering with Adobe CS6 (primarily After Effects)? Dual XEON E5-2630/2640 or a GTX680/690 card with 1536 cuda cores? (The higher XEONS above 2630/2640 are way too expensive I think, as well as NVIDIA QUADRO 5000/6000 Cards)

4. When I search about hardware/GPU rendering I now get a lot of threads about the "new raytracing engine" for rendering 3D. But I am not looking to render 3D, but 2D (What happened to "good old" mercury engine? ), and I need to do 2D rendering as FAST as possible!! I will be producing a 24 minute 4K x 4K (circular) movie for a client, as well as several "regular" 4K projects (3840x2160). I am confused why 2D rendering is not mentioned in raytracing rendering enginge.

5. Would 64GB DDR3 ram be sufficient? I am worried if I decide to overclock a little I may run into problems if going for too much RAM. Then again I may not need to overclock if the system is fast as it is.

6. Regarding Storage I could go for eiter a RAID workstatoin (RADI 5 or 6? Or other?), or a fast rendering workstation, with a slower and larger server for backup. I suppose I could use some increased write speed on the workstation as I will be rendering 4K x 4K footage in high bitrates, but I don't think the hard-drives will be the bottleneck here, but the rendering capabilites!?. Although I know choice of harddisk/storage is important in a video editing system, the other issues as with choosing Dual XEONS or i7 3930K + GTX690 (or both XEON + GTX690) for rendering is more urgent do decide upon right now.

Any input will be greatly appreciated!!

Best,

Ola

    This topic has been closed for replies.

    4 replies

    mariojrmatos
    Participant
    February 10, 2013

    I have a same problem. I need a laptop for 2.5K video editing on CS6 products, especially Premiere and After Effects, plus some 3ds Max and Maya medium-level modeling. Battery is not an issue but good CPU, GPU and RAM are crucial. My budget is about €2500.

    I know that a desktop workstation is way better and gives us more for our money but I have one, a pretty powerful one, so what I need now is a laptop for video editing when I’m on the road because I work all around the world hence the necessity of a mobile solution.

    Todd_Kopriva
    Inspiring
    February 10, 2013

    See this page for information about hardware for Premiere Pro and After Effects: http://adobe.ly/pRYOuk

    Web Magi
    Participating Frequently
    October 7, 2012
    October 9, 2012

    Yes and they (Adobe) recommend dual XEON processors for those hard core workstations. I am not sure how Mylenium means an i7 with max 6 cores (12 with hyperthreading) will be better than eg. a dual XEON E5 2680 setup with 16 cores (32 with hyperthreading enabled).

    But obviously this is more complex than I thought..

    MarkWeiss
    Inspiring
    August 25, 2015

    After having built a dual Xeon workstation, and discovering that Premiere CS6 runs worse on it than it does on the Core2Quad that it replaced, I'm not sure that Adobe is all that compatible with multiple core / CPU machines. I get erratic playback, dropped frames, playback speed going to 8X by itself after five minutes of playing at normal speed, then stopping. Sometimes playback starts by itself with no user input. I've tried seven different nVidia Titan X drivers, but none give me the performance I enjoyed on my 8 year old workstation that this replaces. Sometimes too many cores spells havoc with otherwise reliable programs.

    Mylenium
    Legend
    October 7, 2012

    4. When I search about hardware/GPU rendering I now get a lot of threads about the "new raytracing engine" for rendering 3D. But I am not looking to render 3D, but 2D (What happened to "good old" mercury engine? ), and I need to do 2D rendering as FAST as possible!!

    The Mercury engine only exists in Premiere Pro at this point, but even there it is dependent on feeding it with formats it actualyl supports (which are a lot, but not all). Any acceleration in AE is dependent on third-party plug-ins using OpenGL/ CUDA, mostly, which will do zero if you don't use any of them. The rest is not really of any consequence. With AE as it is now, it is always an "either....,or..." situation. You cannot use GPU acceleration with MP rendering, so if you were to buy a dual Xeon setup to use MP, any  of those super-expensive Quadros wouldn't do much. And in reverse, plug-ins/ features that use GPU don't give a flyin' frakkk about MP. It's simply inherent in how most of that works. That aside, even if you limit yourself to CPU-only rendering, there are enough scenarios where MP rendering will just not work, including time-remapping or other temporal effects. So to cut a long story short: If interactive performance is crucial, a single core7i is better and it will also much better handle all that time mangling stuff. Everything else would be a waste.

    Mylenium

    October 7, 2012

    Hi Mylenium and thank you for your reply.

    Maybe I was a bit unclear, and most likely my knowledge on the area is outdated/limited, but I do not entirely understand your answer (at least not all of it).

    I do not really care what the technologies for fast hardware accelereated rendering is/was called, I just seem to recall from a few years back, that hardware video (2D) rendering had something to do with "mercury engine" with Adobe/NVIDIA, hence I get confused with this new "raytraced" 3D rendering engine beinge mentioned everywhere, but no 2D hardware rendering being mentioned anymore. I am not necessarily looking to use "Mercure engine", I am simply looking for the fastest and best hardware way to go for working/editing/rendering high resolution high quality 2D video, dual Xeon E5, or a GTX680/690 with it's 1536 available CUDA cores for Adobe CS6.

    I will try to rephrase my main challenge down to one question:

    What CPU(s) would I need to beat video (1080/4K) rendering performance from a 1536 CUDA cores GTX680/690.

    Or do I misunderstand? Are you saying that a CUDA based GPU simply can only do hardware encoding in/with specialized filters where CUDA is enabled, and cannot do the same core video number crunching rendering tasks as eg. a dual Xeon setup?

    My After Effects CS6 task will consist of a lot of trial-and-error with rendering preview, using frame blending, different time-streching, warping, remapping, twixtoring, noise reduction filer (NEAT), and finally rendering it all to disk as fast as possible. So I will need a lot of fast RAM, but what else is best for achieving best performance here.. The xeons or the Cudas?

    I was hoping to be able get away with a cheaper solution using an i7 3930K ir 3960K + GTX680/690, but if I really have a huge advantage of going dual Xeon E5, then maybe I will have to take the cost. And then the question is, would a dual E5 2630 6 core be good enough, or do I have to sell my left kidney and go for a dual E5 2660 with 8 cores.

    Thanks for any help,

    O.

    February 10, 2013

    We have a hp z820 with dual 2687w and 128gb ram. ...  the intel c602 chipset hosts two samsung 840 pro ssds its scremeanily fast.

    What's the boot drive - one of the Samsung SSD drives?

    If you don't mind me asking, what are your boot (cold to login prompt) and shutdown times?  The fastest I could get a Z820 to boot was 1:01 (shutdown at 0:05).  I did tweak BIOS settings but didn't do anything in Windows yet.  Time to "Starting Windows" is 15-17 seconds - so BIOS init isn't all that slow - it's Windows starting that is.  My feeling is, Windows goes through a lot more on a Z-series vs. your regular desktop - something to look into.


    Ours is within that range. U know 2 pro cessors comunicating. Many pci devices the gtx 680, a red rocket, blackmagic extreme 3d, lsi 9286cv all has to be registerd, fact is the more components u have on a system the slower it takes it to boot up. Dats a bbrand new macbook air with the highest processor and ram option would always be faster than a macbook pro with the highest processor and ram option. Dat typa analogy. The hp has to register so many components dats why it boots up slow.

    Web Magi
    Participating Frequently
    October 7, 2012

    In my experience, Precision workstations are some of the most robust and reliable production machines made. I've been using a tower since 2008, and it's a beast, plus I still have a working 2005 Precision laptop.

    I'm currently looking at this for upgrade purposes: http://www.dell.com/us/business/p/precision-t7600/pd?refid=precision-t7600

    I built my own computers too, right up until 2005 when I got too busy to fix my main PC after it failed. If you go for the Precision, I would call to order. When I purchased the tower in 2008, I went through the motions of ordering online while I was ordering over the phone. I wanted to see if they were giving me the best deal possible. The machine I built online was over $5,000. The total cost of that same computer over the phone was less than $3,000. Not sure how they did that, but I didn't complain.

    I honestly can't remember how many days it was between the order, and delivery, I just remember it being very few. I'm sure I paid a little extra for fast delivery.

    Good luck!

    October 7, 2012

    Yes I am also considering Dell. But I think they charge a little too much. They charge 3 x the price of a hard-drive than what it cost elsewhere..

    Will see what I decide, maybe I will call them as well.

    Thanks.