What's best for Video Editing Computer?

kimmyyny

Commendable
Apr 17, 2016
3
0
1,510
Hello!

I recently updated my computer, but when I'm editing videos on Premiere Pro, sometimes it gets stuck. I was wondering what I would need to update in order for video editing to be smoother and faster?

What I currently have:
- Processor: Intel core i7-6700K
- Motherboard: Z170-E LGA 1151 ATX Intel
- Ram: 16GB 2 x 8GB DDR4-3000 PC4-24000
- Graphics Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB Superclocked Video Card
- Power Supply: CS450M
- SSD: Samsung 850 EVO 250GB
 
Solution
What container are you trying to edit?
What codec are you trying to edit?

Transcode your files to an intermediate codec, DNxHD, DNxHR and so on, on Windows, if you fall under the broadcast format standard.

If you're having trouble understanding what I just said, please download this program: https://mediaarea.net/en/MediaInfo

1. Open the program, and select File -> Open -> File -> Open one of the files you're working with.

2. File -> Export -> Copy and paste what's said in the .txt created by the program, and post it here.


If you're working with a variable framerate, use a program like Handbrake, and re encode the file to constant framerate, and the constant quality to 0, and you're done.




All the best!

kimmyyny

Commendable
Apr 17, 2016
3
0
1,510


When I'm editing, it would often glitch. For example, if I'm trying to play back by clicking on a certain area on the timeline, it simply wouldn't play and I would have to wait for it to respond.
 
make sure on the rebuild you did a clean install of windows. if not it could be a driver issue. make sure have the newest intel chipset drivers installed and the newest bios file. the new skylake were found by prime95 to have a core bug. mb vendors have been dropping bios updates to fix it. the other issue is the cs450 is not a good power supply and is under sized for a work rig. try hardware info 64 bit set it to sensor and logging check your 12v rail make sure it holding above 11.7v.
 
What container are you trying to edit?
What codec are you trying to edit?

Transcode your files to an intermediate codec, DNxHD, DNxHR and so on, on Windows, if you fall under the broadcast format standard.

If you're having trouble understanding what I just said, please download this program: https://mediaarea.net/en/MediaInfo

1. Open the program, and select File -> Open -> File -> Open one of the files you're working with.

2. File -> Export -> Copy and paste what's said in the .txt created by the program, and post it here.


If you're working with a variable framerate, use a program like Handbrake, and re encode the file to constant framerate, and the constant quality to 0, and you're done.




All the best!
 
Solution