Advice on new PC for video editing

Hi!
I'm building new PC for video editing (Adobe CS6). System is based on Videoguys DIY9 recomendations (http://www.videoguys.com/Guide/E/Videoguys+DIY9+Its+Time+for+Sandy+Bridge+E/0xe9b142f408a2 b03ab88144a434e88de7.aspx) with few changes:
CPU:  Intel Core i7-3930K 3.2GHz
MB:  ASUS P9X79 PRO
RAM:  Corsair Vengeance Red 16GB (4x4GB) DDR3-2133
Video:  ASUS GTX 570 DCII 1280MB GDDR5 DP
HDD:  Corsair Force 3 90GB SATA3 550/500MBs (system disk)
          Seagate Barracuda 1TB SATA3 7200RPM 64MB (scratch disk)
PSU:  CORSAIR AX850 80+ GOLD
DVD:  ASUS 12D1S BD-R
Case:  ANTEC P280
OS:  Win7 Pro OEM
RAID:  G-SPEED eS (RAID 5)
Any thoughts & suggestions on such configuration?
Thank you in advance!

I made last updates to PC configuration (updates - bold) and soon going to buy. So... maybe final check:
CPU:  Intel Core i7-3930K 3.2GHz
Cooler:  Corsair Hydro H70
MB:  Asus P9X79 PRO
RAM: Corsair Vengeance Black 16GB (4x4GB) DDR3-1600 CL9 1.35V XMP1.3
Video:  Asus GTX670-DC2-2GD5
HDD:  Samsung 830 Series 128GB SATA3 520/320MBs (system disk)
          2 x Seagate Barracuda 2TB SATA3 7200RPM 64MB (scratch/cache/render disk) *
PSU:  CORSAIR AX850 80+ GOLD
DVD:  LiteOn BD-RE iHBS212-32
Case:  ANTEC P280
OS:  Win7 Pro OEM
RAID:  G-SPEED eS (RAID 5, projects/media)
* Due to a limited budget, at the beginning I'll use HDD's in non-RAID configuration or will build RAID0 based on MB RAID controller

Similar Messages

  • Need advice on new mac for video editing.

    Hello!  I'm throwing $4,000 down on a new iMac to use for video editing and various other design purposes.  I'm maxing it out with a 3.75ghz quad core intel i7, 32 gigs of ram, 4 gigs of video ram and a 1t sold state hard drive.  With being a creative cloud subscriber  and updates being rolled out constantly, as a video editor do you think i'll get at least 5-7 years out of this mac.  I also do 3d animates with after effects and cinema 4d.  Thanks!  Any advice and feedback is greatly appreciated.

    I made last updates to PC configuration (updates - bold) and soon going to buy. So... maybe final check:
    CPU:  Intel Core i7-3930K 3.2GHz
    Cooler:  Corsair Hydro H70
    MB:  Asus P9X79 PRO
    RAM: Corsair Vengeance Black 16GB (4x4GB) DDR3-1600 CL9 1.35V XMP1.3
    Video:  Asus GTX670-DC2-2GD5
    HDD:  Samsung 830 Series 128GB SATA3 520/320MBs (system disk)
              2 x Seagate Barracuda 2TB SATA3 7200RPM 64MB (scratch/cache/render disk) *
    PSU:  CORSAIR AX850 80+ GOLD
    DVD:  LiteOn BD-RE iHBS212-32
    Case:  ANTEC P280
    OS:  Win7 Pro OEM
    RAID:  G-SPEED eS (RAID 5, projects/media)
    * Due to a limited budget, at the beginning I'll use HDD's in non-RAID configuration or will build RAID0 based on MB RAID controller

  • Advice on Pc build for video editing with Premier Pro

    I have recently managed to save up £1500 for a new PC for video editing. The following are the specs I am considering for the build:
    Intel Core i7 3770K,1155, Ivy Bridge, Quad Core, 3.5GHz, 5 GT/s DMI, 650MHz GPU, 8MB Smart Cache, 35x Ratio, 77W,Retail
    256GB Samsung 840 Pro Series Basic, 2.5" SSD 7mm 3-core MDX, 21nm Toggle NAND, Read 540MB/s, Write 520MB/s
    850W Corsair Professional Series Gold 850AX, Modular, 90%Eff', 80 PLUS Gold, SLI/CrossFire, EPS 12V, Quiet Fan, ATX, PSU
    16GB (2x8GB) Corsair DDR3 Vengeance Jet Black, PC3-17066 (2133), Non-ECC Unbuffered, CAS 10-11-11-31, XMP, 1.5V
    2TB WD WD2002FAEX Caviar Black, SATA 6Gb/s, 7200rpm, 64MB Cache OEM
    Pioneer BDR-207EBK Blu-ray Writer Quad Layer 12x BD-R, x8 DVD±DL x16 DVD±R Up to 128GB Retail
    Antec 902 Nine Hundred Two V3 Mid Tower ATX Case, USB3, With Side Window w/o PSU
    Creative Sound Blaster Recon3D PCI-E Soundcard 5.1Ch THX/Dolby Optical In/Out OEM
    Asus P8Z77-V, Intel Z77, S 1155, DDR3, SATA III - 6Gb/s, SATA RAID, PCIe 3.0 (x16), DisplayPort/ DVI-D/ HDMI, ATX
    2GB EVGA GTX 670, 28nm, PCIe 3.0 (x16), 6008MHz GDDR5, GPU 915MHz, Boost 980MHz, Cores 1344 +Free to Play Bundle
    Edimax EW-7722PnD N600 Wireless Dual-Band PCI Express Adapter Dual 300N
    Microsoft Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit SP1, Operating System, Single, - OEM
    I have been advised to get a full size case rather than a midi. Any other advice would be greatly appreciated!

    The advice to get a bigger case is correct. That GTX 670 will be a very tight squeeze inside that Antec 902 case due to the way the interior of that case itself was designed: The hard drives will interfere with the motherboard's expansion slots, restricting the length of those cards that will fit to only 9.5 inches long. Unfortunately, although a reference GTX 670 is about 9 inches long, higher-end GPUs will not fit if the PCI-e x16 slot is inline with an installed hard drive.
    Speaking of the GTX 670, it is clearly overkill on any system that's equipped with only 16GB of RAM total. Plus, you will need a third-party CPU cooler in order to perform any overckocking whatsoever of the CPU. Unfortunately, the Corsair Vengeance heat spreaders are extremely tall (over 50mm high!) that they will prevent proper installation of any decent tower-style CPU air cooler, especially if all four DIMM slots on the motherboard are being used. You will need 32GB of RAM plus at least a good third-party CPU air cooler such as a Cooler master Hyper 212 EVO (and overclock the CPU to over 4.0GHz) in order for that system to utilize anywhere near the performance capability of the GTX 670.
    Third, you do not need that particular Sound Blaster card at all: Its sound quality is surprisingly poor for a such a pricey discrete add-on sound card (or put it this way, it does not sound anywhere close to sufficiently better than on-motherboard audio to justify its cost).

  • Need new notebook for video editing

    I've been shopping for a new notebook for my friend. He will be editing 50 p loaded from his Panasonic HC - X920, using Premier Pro.
    It must be a notebook, a desktop is not an option. I've narrowed it down to a particular Asus system here in Northern Thailand. Selection/variety is a bit of an issue here.
    It will be used primarily for editing short clips ( 6 - 30 seconds ) used as stock footage. On occasion he does a 1 - 5 minute YouTube video.
    I'm aware the following system only has a 5400 RPM drive and that is my main concern. Other than that, will the system have sufficient resources for most jobs (short clips)?
    Any help/advice would be much appreciated.
    ASUS N750JV-T4099H
    CPU
    Intel Core i7-4700HQ (2.40 GHz, 6 MB L3 Cache, up to 3.40 GHz)
      Chipset
    Mobile Intel HM87 Express Chipset
    Graphic system
      Graphic Chip
    nVidia GeForce GT 750M (4 GB GDDR3)
    Display
      Type
    17.3 inch WUXGA (1920x1080) Full HD LED
    Main Memory
      Memory
    16 GB DDR3
    Hard Disk Drive
      Hard Disk
    1 TB 5400 RPM
    Optical Disc Drive
      Drive
    Blu-ray Disc Drive (Blu-ray Writable)
    Web Camera
      Details
    HD Webcam

    Thanks for the thoughtful reply Bill. It's what I was hoping for.
    Without swapping out the 1 TB hard drive, would you say editing short clips is doable? Would there be noticable jitter when editing short clips or only when attempting to load and edit many clips at once?
    Currently on the Dell with an i-5 processor, we're able to handle single clips in Premier Elements no problem. I'm assuming we could do the same with the new system which has considerably more ram and a better graphics card. But of course I don't want to commit my friend to buying a system which can't then handle 50 p clips.
    Thanks in advance. I do appreciate the input.

  • Need advice on getting macbook for video editing purpose!

    Hi!
    Was thinking of getting the macbook to do some video editing stuff so would appreciate valuable advices for those who have done it before. Was thinking that I will upgrade it to 2gb and a bigger hdd when i purchase it.
    Is it slow on the macbook? Anyone tried using adobe premiere or final cut pro on macbook? Heard that battery is draining very fast on macbook also? Care to share?
    Thanks.

    Hi mackie,
    In addition to 777iPod which is correct that my external DVD burner is faster than my macbook optical drive, I also use it for Dual Layer media if I need one, since my original macbook didn't come with one.
    Also I use the lightscribe etching program to etched the top surface of my dvd disk project.
    And my internal HD is 100 GB (7200 rpm), after I replaced the apple standard and my external HD is 500 GB Lacie D2 and Lacie Porsche 160 GB.
    And if I'm not mistaken, adobe already stop developing premiere on mac platform, so if I'm right, the last premiere will be for Power PC and it will struggle using it under mac intel using rosseta.
    You can use new premiere version on boot camp xp if there is none available for mac.
    And here is a nice toy to play if you haven't got one:
    http://www.contourdesign.com/shuttlepro/
    Good Luck.
    ps: I guess most poster suggest you to consider macbookpro and it is not a bad idea.

  • Good Mac for video editing?

    Hi,
    I'm interested to buy a new Mac for video editing and I don't know which mac to choose. I need a laptop computer that can run Adobe After Effects and Final Cut Studio without too much bugs. I asked some people which Mac I need to buy, and they told me a Quad-Core iMac 27 inch or a Mac Pro.
    Since my bugdet is quite limited, I will prefer buying an iMac than a Mac Pro because the iMac already has a screen.
    Thank you,
    Franklin Schrans
    <Email Edited by Host>

    appsandhacks(youtube) wrote:
    Hi,
    Thanks for the great advice, but since I live in Belgium I can't order a Mac from the US Apple Store.
    Franklin Schrans
    [email protected]
    Franklin,
    You are correct you cannot purchase from the US Apple Store however the Belgian store does have  refurbished section located at: http://store.apple.com/be-fr/browse/home/specialdeals/clearance?mco=OTY2ODY2NQ
    I see they don't have anything to sell right now however I would continue checking this site very frequently, products come and go very quickly. If you decide to purchase new in order to get the most powerful iMac purchase a machine based on the i7 processor. You can also call the online store their number is in the upper left corner of the store's home page, they can also provide advice or if you visit your local Apple Store they can assist as well.
    Roger

  • Thinking of Building/Buying a PC for Video Editing?

    If one is thinking of building, or buying a PC for video editing, Harm Millaard has published an ARTICLE in the Adobe Hardware Forum. He has arranged it such that one can rather pick and choose from three levels of system - beginner, intermediate and full-blown advanced pro-level rig. There have been some advances in hardware, since the article was first published, but with the discussions that follow it, much has been updated.
    Harm approaches the computer from the eyes of one using PrPro, but with the exception of the GPU requirements for the Mercury Playback Engine (MPE), PrE will benefit from his suggestions. Be sure to follow all of the links that he offers in that rather longish thread.
    Also see his other NLE PC ARTICLE, and his storage requirements ARTICLE.
    If one is considering a RAID setup, his RAID ARTICLE will prove very useful.
    If one is considering working with external HDD's, then this ARTICLE should be useful.
    Hope that this helps people, who are considering a new computer for video editing.
    Good luck,
    Hunt

    Harm Millaard has written an update to his computer ARTICLE, and there is some good discussion in it, as well.
    Hope that this helps someone.
    Hunt

  • I am planning to buy mac mini 2.5Gzh. I will be using it mainly for video editing and I am planning to upgrade up to 8GB. Is it a good buy or should I try some other alternative.

    I am planning to buy my next desktop. I will be using this mainly for video editing. I am not a professional video editor, I normally do home made videos for youtube, like tutorial, DIY project etc. I use Nikon D3100 camera and some basic green screen techniques as part of recording. So my basic video editing would be just syncing audio, editing videos to cut un-necessary frames etc and some basic effects. I am also planning to buy final cut pro.
    So my question is should I buy the mac mini or Imac?

    Great advice from RRFS!
    For video editing, do go for 16 GB of RAM ffrom OWC & consider the twice as fast i7 2.6 model, see Geekbench scores here..
    http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i5-2.5-late-2 012-specs.html
    http://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/mac_mini/specs/mac-mini-core-i7-2.6-late-2 012-specs.html

  • MBP for video editing

    Hi,
    I am planning to purchase a MBP for editing HDV video while on the road using Final Cut Studio. My plan is to also use a G-Raid external HD for storage of content and backup.
    My Question is regarding the internal HD..FCS2 takes up over 50G to install the entire suite, which really eats into the 160 gig internal HD. Will the 250 gig HD be more appropriate?? Any suggestions for seeting up a new MBP for video editing??
    Apologies if this is in the wrong forum!
    Cheers
    SJH

    Will the 250 gig HD be more appropriate?
    If you're comparing it to the 160GB 7200rpm drive then you will get similar (though not better) performance. The best drive, assuming it's large enough for you is the Hitachi 200GB 7200pm drive. It has the best mix size and performance and comfortably beats the rest. Unfortunately it's not only the fastest but it's also the most expensive drive you can get at the moment. This might help…
    http://www.barefeats.com/rosa06.html
    EDIT : Be aware that this drive will require you to do your own installation and hence, potentially void your warranty. However, I do think it will be worth it in your case. I have one on order myself.

  • Need advice on purchasing an external hard drive for video editing

    Hi,
    I looking for advice on which external hard drive to get. The main purpose for the hard drive will be storing video files on for use with Final Cut Pro. I have the 12 inch powerbook G4 so I plan to use the FireWire (400) port to connect the drive. I'm interested in getting comment from others who use their external hard drives for video editing.
    Thanks!

    Firstly your decision to use FireWire is a good one, as not only will it free up the USB it performs much better on sustained transfers.
    That said you're still limited by the FireWire interface, so opt for a drive with a big cache (16MB would be good) and fast spindle speed (7200rpm+).
    Some of the newer enclosures are compatible with SATA drives. While these are easier to install and theoretically will perform better, I'm not sure that the performance would justify the extra cost.
    Matt

  • Thinking to buy a new 15inch macbook pro retina display. Aim to use it for video editing and compositing... Is ıt worth for it?

    Hi... I am a freelance filmmaker. Now I have 2008 model mac pro and I am thinking to buy a new macbook pro 15 inch retina display. Do you think its worth for it? I aim to use the macbook mainly for video editing, video compositing (after effects) and photo editing. My current old mac pro has 12 GB and the graphics card is ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT 256 MB (Yes I still use it). My main question is, do you think its better to move to macbook pro or upgrading the old one? Making it 32 GB of RAM and buy a new NVIDIA cuda capable graphic card? I dont have enough budget to make it together... Want to hear your suggestions...

    I'm not sure, I've seen pro animators use MBPs but usually with a large monitor. Especially doing video editing, compositing and editing it might make more sense to upgrade the Mac Pro to an SSD as the boot drive. What kind of CPU setup is in your Pro?
    Check these out:
    mac pro SSD upgrades?
    SSD as system disk while users folder + data on HDD
    Early 2008 8-Core Mac Pro GPU Upgrades
    I deal exclusively with OWC. I'd call them and walk them through your system and see what they say.
    What you do takes a lot of CPU, RAM, graphics and boot disk power.
    I've upgraded my two computers to SSDs and the first thing I noticed was that Photoshop CS6 opens in 7 seconds vrs. 50 seconds when the application was on a HDD.

  • For video editing, is the new 13" MBP enough? Or should I go for 15"?

    For video editing, I will be using both Final Cut Pro 7, and Adobe CS5.
    Is the new 13" Macbook Pro enough? I'm asking both for the lower-end and higher-end 13". Or should I just go with the 15"?
    I'm just seeking for opinions from more experienced mac users, since this is my first transfer from Windows to Mac. Also, I'm taking into consideration in the price difference among these different models.
    Thank you very much

    It will render much faster on the new quad cores then any other MBP ever made. This new release is really a pretty major deal in the laptop world to my thinking. If I didn't just get a new iMac, I would be probably getting one. I don't do a lot of video and I use FCE not Pro so my need isn't as great, but I do a lot of photography and with several things open at once so the power matched with sufficient ram is pretty amazing. But is it absolutely a must? I had a friend who just until this year was a film music editor and he was using Pro Tools on a G4 Power Book though he had to start working around the machine limitations at the end of the day, but it is possible. Still for the money, the new machines are a great deal at pretty much the same price as what they are replacing. I know I'm advocating here, but I'm just a user not and employee:)

  • The new i mac is it good for video editing

    apple just release  2 new models of imac they still looking very good but they are considerable cheaper so i wonder if any of these models good for video editing.

    some say the pice cut is not worth it
    http://arstechnica.com/apple/2014/07/1099-imac-review-lose-50-of-your-performanc e-to-save-18-of-the-money/

  • I need some performance advice for video editing

    or
    I am deciding on which Mac Book Pro to purchase for video editing. My choices are:
    2012 - 2.3 Ghz Quad-Core i7 w/ 500GB Serial ATA@5400 rpm 8G RAM
    or
    2013  - 2.0 Ghz Quad-Core i7 w/ 256 Flash Storage 8G RAM
    The one is a year newer but .3 Ghz slower processor and I'm really not sure if it would matter that much for video editing. (FCPX, After Effects, etc.) I know the Flash Storage would be faster as far as opening applications etc., but for video editing, I didn't know.
    Can someone more qualified than me recommend which would be best. I need a laptop for video editing, but I need the least expensive I can get so I am looking at refurbs from Apple.
    Thank you!

    If you look at the 2013 Retina models in the Apple store, you'll see the higher end version has both the Intel Iris and an additional Nvidia graphics module. The higher end models have this additional circuit, which is to provide faster and smoother graphics for video, games, etc.
    I'd suggest looking at both model benchmarks at everymac.com. Here's the 2012:
    https://www.everymac.com/systems/apple/macbook_pro/macbook-pro-unibody-faq/macbo ok-pro-13-15-mid-2012-performance-benchmark-comparison.html

  • Better for Video Editing? MBP 13" or 15" w/9600M GT

    I am planning on purchasing a Macbook Pro for relatively extensive use of Final Cut Pro (HD video) along with possibly some light Motion work and video transcoding. In addition I will be using it for photo editing and web editing. I don't plan on using it for any high-end gaming.
    I will be purchasing a $200 24" external monitor to use most of the time along with external keyboard and mouse (so MBP screen size isn't an issue), but I need the portability and don't have the funds to purchase an additional dedicated desktop yet.
    I am having trouble deciding between the 13" and the 15", mainly due to conflicting opinions I've been hearing over the importance of a dedicated graphics card for video editing. Salespeople at the Apple store tell me it's important and I should get the 15". Research online yielded heated forum arguments over whether it really makes a difference or not.
    The price difference is quite significant though at the configurations I picked ($765) so I am seeking advice here for whether people think the cost difference is really justified for my needs. Note that both configurations include 4GB of RAM, smallest hard drive option (i've got external drives) and AppleCare protection.
    Pricing with education discount after tax:
    13" 2.26GHz - $1520
    15" 2.66GHz w/9600M GT 256MB - $2285
    *Is there a real difference in video editing performance and if so, is it really worth an extra $765? Or is there a better option that I'm not considering?*

    Thanks everyone for the feedback!
    Studio X wrote:
    Are you planning on making any money at this or are you only in it for fun? Have you ever edited before? Have you ever edited with FCS before? What of the 44 billion HD formats are you planning on editing? Do you have a camera? What format does it record? If it's a flash media based device, what's your back up strategy? How are you planning to externally monitor the HD material ? What are you planning to use as media drives as the system drive should not be used for media capture or playback?
    Still, I guess I come down on the side of "it doesn't matter as neither one is a serious editing machine". If I was in the market for a laptop and was limited to the current apple lineup, the only machine of interest is the 17" MacBookPro. The other two MacBookPros you are considering have no expresscard slot and come only with glossy screens - both are serious deficiencies in my world.
    I do plan on using this computer professionally. I am a recent college graduate but do have professional FCS editing experience under my belt. However my work was done using both school and employer resources. I do have an archive of work in Mini DV(HDV) and AVCHD formats. I don't currently own an HD camera, however will likely be purchasing one in the near future. As far as externally monitoring HD material, what else would I need other than the 24" external monitor (perfectly capable of full HD) or a separate HDTV? In addition to several older usb2 external drives for backup I do have a 1TB 7200rpm external capable of FW800 and eSATA that I would use as a media drive.
    I currently have an old 17" dell notebook with a glossy screen. The screen hasn't really bothered me, but the size and weight of the notebook has. And while the 17" MBP is a little lighter and smaller than my old dell, I would still prefer a 13" or 15". But from the opinions I've been hearing I'm steering away from the 13" and fully realize the downsides to the lack of ExpressCard slot in the current 15" as well. Still wondering while Apple decided to remove it.
    MartinR wrote:
    If budget is a primary constraint, then consider a refurbished 15" or 17" MBP from Apple, or a used MBP from a reputable supplier.
    I hadn't checked into the refurbished options, but now that I did, I found a nice 15" (late 2008 unibody) configuration that would provide a lot more value for the buck. For about $550 more than the new 13" config I would get a faster processor, 2" bigger screen, 9600M 512mb GPU, double the internal storage, removable battery as well as the ExpressCard slot (even though its not listed in specs, it's there). The only trade off I can see is battery life.
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/FC026LL/A?mco=MjE0NjE5MA

Maybe you are looking for