Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions
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@Dashrender Yeah, I have had that issue before so I would like to see if I can get it installed from the factory.
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@MarigabyFrias uses Asus equipment for editing.
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I know some post shops do custom builds to get better value and customization.
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@scottalanmiller said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
I know some post shops do custom builds to get better value and customization.
yeah i was thinking the same thing.
You can get a few 1 TB SSD drives and save a bundle over buying from Dell.
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Thanks for the whitebox idea. I don't have the time to deal with that level of customization- building, tweaking, supporting. They are kind of trying it out so I don't know how far they plan on taking it. If it gets to be a big thing, then I can spec out some custom stuff.
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Workstation Grade isn't just about getting a Xeon CPU my workstation has a Core i7.. Xeons aren't more powerful than desktop CPUs anymore. But you get better quality hardware, and they tend to last longer than normal desktops. Not to mention more upgradable, and bigger/higher quality PSUs. I'd build one or buy a workstation system. Building is becoming less and less popular for video editing though as the cost difference is much closer than it used to be.
I personally do most of my 4k RAW editing on a workstation laptop, with a quadro card, core i7, 64GB ram, 4k 17" LCD, boot PCIe SSD, 1TB editing SSD.
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If it's just a single workstation you need, check out www.stikc.com (Stallard Technologies, Inc.). They do mostly off-lease equipment, but you can get a factory warranty with just about everything if you want. Because they do off-lease equipment, they'll have a decent selection of workstations more often than not.
I wouldn't cheap out on one by putting rust in for scratch/temp work space. Transcoding was always storage bound when I was working on video for me. Getting an SSD for that, if not a PCIe based card, would be my only recommendation besides what you're already looking at.
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@travisdh1 said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
I wouldn't cheap out on one by putting rust in for scratch/temp work space. Transcoding was always storage bound when I was working on video for me. Getting an SSD for that, if not a PCIe based card, would be my only recommendation besides what you're already looking at.
The Bottle Neck for transcoding is almost never the disks. For live playback maybe, but not transcoding that's CPU/GPU
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@Jason said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
@travisdh1 said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
I wouldn't cheap out on one by putting rust in for scratch/temp work space. Transcoding was always storage bound when I was working on video for me. Getting an SSD for that, if not a PCIe based card, would be my only recommendation besides what you're already looking at.
The Bottle Neck for transcoding is almost never the disks. For live playback maybe, but not transcoding that's CPU/GPU
Hrm, I remember swearing at something while transcoding. I thought it was the drive performance after GPU was enabled. I could be wrong, it's been years.
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@travisdh1 said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
@Jason said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
@travisdh1 said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
I wouldn't cheap out on one by putting rust in for scratch/temp work space. Transcoding was always storage bound when I was working on video for me. Getting an SSD for that, if not a PCIe based card, would be my only recommendation besides what you're already looking at.
The Bottle Neck for transcoding is almost never the disks. For live playback maybe, but not transcoding that's CPU/GPU
Hrm, I remember swearing at something while transcoding. I thought it was the drive performance after GPU was enabled. I could be wrong, it's been years.
Maybe Jason is just used to working on machines with RAID arrays that remove the disk performance issues for him. Definitely wasn't the case in my home or small workstation setups. Single drive solutions for work/scratch. Considering the price of SSD these days, there's just no reason not to do it.
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Having a good GPU can do wonders for rendering times.
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@dafyre said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
Having a good GPU can do wonders for rendering times.
Even just halfway decent one does amazing things for render times, yep.
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@Dashrender said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
@travisdh1 said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
@Jason said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
@travisdh1 said in Video Editing/Production Workstation - Questions:
I wouldn't cheap out on one by putting rust in for scratch/temp work space. Transcoding was always storage bound when I was working on video for me. Getting an SSD for that, if not a PCIe based card, would be my only recommendation besides what you're already looking at.
The Bottle Neck for transcoding is almost never the disks. For live playback maybe, but not transcoding that's CPU/GPU
Hrm, I remember swearing at something while transcoding. I thought it was the drive performance after GPU was enabled. I could be wrong, it's been years.
Maybe Jason is just used to working on machines with RAID arrays that remove the disk performance issues for him. Definitely wasn't the case in my home or small workstation setups. Single drive solutions for work/scratch. Considering the price of SSD these days, there's just no reason not to do it.
as I said it can help with playback, but transcoding doesn't even process at real time, Disk isn't the bottle neck.
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The Optiplex 7040 only has a 285 watt PSU so I don't know if I am going to be able to go that route. I think I might be going back to workstation territory.