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  • New PC specs

    Posted by Aaron Cadieux on May 2, 2006 at 4:22 pm

    Hello all.

    I am about ready to build my new editing PC. I run Adobe Premier Pro 1.5, Adobe After Effects, Adobe Encore and Adobe Photoshop, and tried to reference their website to see what they recommend. Here is a list of the specs for the machine. Let me know if anyone thinks I should change anything.

    Case – COOLER MASTER Centurion 532 RC-532-SKN1 Case
    Motherboard – ASUS A8N-SLI Socket 939 NVIDIA nForce4 SLI
    ATX AMD
    CPU – AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+ Toledo 2000MHz HT 2 x
    1MB L2 Cache Socket 939 Dual Core Processor
    RAM (times 2) – CORSAIR XMS 2GB (2 x 1GB) 184-Pin DDR SDRAM DDR
    400 (PC 3200) Unbuffered Dual Channel Kit System
    Memory Model Twinx2048-3200c2pt
    Video Card – PNY VCQFX1400-PCIE-PB Quadro FX1400 128MB
    256-bit DDR PCI Express x16 Video Card
    Sound Card – Creative Sound Blaster Audigy2 ZS SB0350 7.1
    Channels 24-bit 192KHz PCI Interface
    Hard Drive – Seagate Barracuda ST3808110AS 80GB SATA
    DVD Drive – Plextor PX755SA
    Firewire Card – Belkin IEEE 1394 – 3 Port Firewire Card
    Power Supply – Antec SmartPower 2.0 SP-450 ATX12V 450W Power
    Supply 115/230 V UL, TUV, CB, FCC CLASS B, CUL
    Fans/heatsyncs – AeroCool TURBINE 2000 120mm Sleeve Case
    Cooling Fan
    Operating System- XP Pro

    Thanks a lot.

    -Aaron Cadieux

  • 14 Replies
  • Alex Jusay

    May 2, 2006 at 4:54 pm

    nice specs…consider adding an uninterrupted power supply and a RAID. are you going to use XP PRO 64 bit? i heard a lot of horroble stories about 64bit window and video editing…

  • Blast1

    May 2, 2006 at 9:23 pm

    [cadge31] “Hard Drive – Seagate Barracuda ST3808110AS 80GB SATA”

    One Hard Drive? One drive for Apps, one drive for Conformed audio, preview files, scratch disks, misc clips, one drive or array for video source files.

  • Aaron Cadieux

    May 3, 2006 at 12:15 am

    I plan using my external drives for the editing.

  • Redgum

    May 3, 2006 at 6:42 am

    Complete waste of time and money if you use external drives or no Raid. Stick with what you have.
    Also, that particular SLI board will give you grief with a single Quadro card.

    Redgum Television Productions
    Broadcast & Corporate Documentaries
    Brisbane, Australia

  • Norman Lafranchi

    May 3, 2006 at 6:49 pm

    I’ve used that MB with a single NVidia 7800 GT card, with no problems. What problems are you experiencing with a Quadro board? Which Quadro Board?

  • Norman Lafranchi

    May 3, 2006 at 6:58 pm

    Upgrade your hard drive and power supply, unless your budget is limited. 250 GB SATA is less than $100, and a small bump in price will get you an Antec 540W power supply. Also, if possible, get these components integrated by the Vendor. They’ll usually do it for less than $50.

    I also wonder if you’d do better getting an NVidia 7900GTX card instead of the professional series Quadro. Someone correct me if I’m wrong, but I believe the 7900 has better performance even though it’s a gaming card.

  • Aaron Cadieux

    May 3, 2006 at 7:56 pm

    A lot of my choices are based on Adobe’s recommendations on their web site. I chose the Quadra since they fully support it. But suggestions are welcomed. Either way, I think my new machine will rock.

  • Redgum

    May 4, 2006 at 7:51 am

    Hi Norman, maybe I was a little harsh but I integrate systems here in OZ. The Quadro FX540 works great but the SLI setup on that board seems to revert to 8 pipes insted of 16 with the Quadro card. The sister Asus board with the 975 chipset is cheaper and much faster but no SLI (and SLI is a compromise at this point in time even for gamers). Dual native Raids would be much better for a video editor. Hate seeing people get ripped off by hype that has no practical use in editing.

    Redgum Television Productions
    Broadcast & Corporate Documentaries
    Brisbane, Australia

  • Believe me your system won’t rock. I have built Premiere Pro systems with the A8N, A8NE, A8NSLI, and A8NSLI32 deluxe. The Nvidia chipset in these products does not lend itself to our needs. Without getting overly technical, the chipset does not share resources with anything the way you need. It is a hot gamer board and thats all. A motherboard that will run a hot graphics cared. If you need to install any other peripherials such as a Decklink, Aja Kona, or Matrox Axio LE etc, you will be waisting both time and money. Norman gave good advice in a previous post. Also the Tyan thunder K8WE would be much better choice if you are partial to AMD. It will run anything you throw at it. PS we did manage to get an A8NSLI32 to run a BM multibridge extreme, but at sacrifice to the SATA controller, and any other pci peripherial installed. None of the other boards would even do that.

    Regards
    GC
    Systems integrator
    Station 3 Media

  • Norman Lafranchi

    May 5, 2006 at 8:50 pm

    We also have the K8WE board, which does rock, but of course adds considerable cost with it’s own price as well as the price of the Opteron chips required for it.

    I’m curious as to which problems you had with the Asus A8NSLI32, and how those manifested themselves. We have the same MoBo running decklink extreme (non-HD), and have had no problems. We also use an NVidia 7800GT card. Perhaps we are running slower than we think and don’t even know it!

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