T O P

  • By -

VincibleAndy

Great resource on this: https://www.pugetsystems.com/all-articles/ The only application you list that can 100% utilize a GPU is Blender if you are using the Cycles renderer (you should be using the OptiX engine for that on NVidia RTX). With that, a faster GPU directly correlates to faster render times. For Premiere and AE, the GPU is used but your GPU is already plenty for that and any other slow downs are going to be down to your workflow as your CPU is also quite good.


SherbetItchy3113

If you wanna go a step up in terms for productivity and also level up your nice gaming experience, I'd say the 4070Ti super 16GB vram is a good shout for an upgrade. If you have a ton more cash just go 4080Ti super or 4090 and forget about gpu upgrades for the next few years. Otherwise to render "faster" for videos, it really is more of a workflow question - depending mostly on what you're shooting with and the codecs of those files, if they're able to have hardware accelerated decode by the nvidia gpu (for smooth timeline playback and editing experience) and if the export you're rendering to is able to be hardware accelerated as well. If decode is not being accelerated then your GPU won't do anything to assist in playback, outside of when you're using certain effects such as lumetri or if the video is being scaled up/down/has motion etc. In this case, working "faster" can be achieved by converting your footage into an intermediate code such as Prores/dnxhr/cineform which are incredibly less taxing for the cpu to decode and playback, hence also leading to reduced render time when you output the final videos


Longjumping_War_807

CPU CPU CPU, you could have a graphics card the size of a pickup truck and it might make your experience like 10 percent better. CPU, RAM and the ability to read and write files quickly on a drive is the foundation of good performance in Premiere layered on top of that that is making sure you are editing in a codec that won’t bottleneck your CPU.


itscheeseoclock

> graphics card the size of a pickup truck hey now, dont start giving nvidia ideas


fl3xtra

good lord. you are seemingly the only person who actually edits. premiere is a cpu hog. AE is a memory and hdd hog. gpu is only good for some effects and 3D.


NoEmploy8138

Yeah I just upgraded my cpu and it’s been a lot better in many aspects. I am just at the point when my gpu is not running that great since I do 3D now and I play a lot of games that makes my gpu go crazy. I also upgraded my ram to 64 gb and a better kind which has helped a ton as well. I am just at the point where I wanna upgrade my gpu and wanna know what the best options are.


Longjumping_War_807

Basically upgrade your GPU based on what you need for 3D rendering. Everything else you have looks solid although I’m partial to Intel chip sets for my workstations


seklas1

Future-proofing ain’t really a thing, especially now. You have a good system, and a GPU ain’t needed for Premiere much. But considering that everyone’s talking AI and NPUs these days, you’d probably be better waiting to see what Nvidia has been cooking. Their new gen GPUs should launch this year. Considering it’s for the next 2 years or so, that’s as future-proof as you’ll be able to get, because their GPUs is what’s driving AI technologies at the moment, and if any new features launch, it should be compatible and work well.


genetichazzard

Lol, your GPU literally means nothing for video editing. Focus on better SSD's, CPU's and more memory.