Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Or, because I'm not very knowledgeable about these things, mayve even a specific recommendation or two for a graphics card.
After years of warnings from Premiere Pro and limitations of my 5-year+ old PC , I finally bought a new PC from Dell. Although I'm an experienced filmmaker (yes, film -- remember that?) with some video editing experience, I'm not going to do any extremely demanding video editing. (Nor, by the way, am I a gamer.)
Here are its specs as far as I can gather them, and I'd like to buy a card before my computer guy comes by to help me set it up and move over my programs and data. (Unfortunately, he doesn't have much experience with graphics cards, although he's a whiz with computers, having left IBM several years ago.)
Dell Inspiron Desktop 3030
Intel Core i5 processor (14 gen)
10-core, 16 CPU Threads, L2 20 MB Cache Memory
8GB memory (I'm going to install 16GB)
512GB SSD (We're going to move one of my HDs over)
Intel UHD Integrated Graphics (730??)
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello @gregew,
I'll move this to the Hardware forum for you.
Thanks,
Kevin
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Nvidia is better for video editing - use the STUDIO driver, not the gaming driver
https://community.adobe.com/t5/video-hardware-discussions/4070-ti-super-vs-7900-xtx/td-p/14584297
Not 100% current, but may help... NOTE - go to the Puget site to see their CURRENT information
https://community.adobe.com/t5/video-hardware/premiere-pro-hardware-articles-to-read-before-you-buy-...
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Thank you, John, but I'm gobsmacked when seeing the prices of these cards. Gosh, even my old computer allowed Premiere Pro to run, after acknowledged and accepted that my integrated graphics were inadequate. (I'm not a "pro" and just use PP as a hobby.) Unless I can find a card that costs less than $190 I'll just wait to see how this new computer handles PP. Does anything like that exist?
Do you suggest I post another question giving my budget limitations?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Unfortunatrely, the sub-$200 range of discrete GPUs are now nearly extinct. All you can find in that range are old- or older-generation GPUs that either lack hardware encoding support whatsoever or are obsolete due to the "latest" meaningful driver version update being years old. You'll have to spend closer to $300 just to even find the cheapest relevant discrete GPU at all that can be utilized in Premiere Pro for years to come.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Get an Intel arc b580 for ~250 dollars.
Apart from that you should check on your prebuilt dell that
A)It has enough space to fit a graphics card
B)It s power supply is sufficient (~550watts+).
Apart from that do not go for less than 32gb of ram.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Wow, John. This is a great resource.
Now all I have to know is whether I can straight-line extrapolate the
percentage efficiencies to the standard video frame rate which is
basically 30fps. In other words, the chart says this for one of the cards:
1080p Ultra
1080p Medium
1440p Ultra
4K Ultra
<>
83.9% (129.3fps) 91.5% (179.1fps) 72.4% (105.8fps) 54.4% (62.3fps)
So if I work in 1440p Ultra (I have no idea what "Ultra" means) using
this graphics card example which is effective 72.4% at 106fps, at my
30fps the card would work at (more than if that were mathematically
possible) 100%? This entire study was done as though the cards were
used for gaming, and I'm assuming that gaming is more processing
intensive than plain old live action video, but as you can see I need a
bit of a primer to fully understand these measurements. I see
tom'sHardware has a Forum as well, so I suppose I should move my
question over there?
Best,
Greg
--
Greg EplerWood
PRIVATE INFORMATION REMOVED FROM THIS PUBLIC FORUM, BEWARE SPAMMERS!
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
My NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 works well for me, but I only edit 1280x720 30fps video
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Too bad it's no longer available new at any price.
In the sub-$190 price range all you can find that can be bought new are 10-year-old Nvidia and AMD GPUs (such as the GeForce GT 710 or 730 and the Radeon HD 5450) that are so obsolete that they are no longer receiving driver updates at all whatsoever, or very-low-end GPUs such as the GeForce GT 1030 or the Radeon RX 6400 or 6500 XT that do not have a hardware encoder at all (and therefore forcing all encoding on the CPU). Nvidia had already discontinued all production of all non-RTX GPUs over a year ago.
Find more inspiration, events, and resources on the new Adobe Community
Explore Now