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Activity Forums Adobe Premiere Pro Ram memory requiered to run Premiere Pro 2.0 preview screen smoothly.

  • Ram memory requiered to run Premiere Pro 2.0 preview screen smoothly.

    Posted by Jesper Karlsson on July 30, 2009 at 11:50 pm

    Hello!
    I am not sure if this question might be a bit off-topic, but I sure hope not.
    I often experience a lot of lag on the preview screen when I’m editing a movie, especially with files that are in .wmv format and those with many effects. It is sometimes impossible to view a certain segement without getting almost 1 frame per 5 second.
    The computer I’m working on have a 1.99GHz processor and 1 GB RAM.
    Since my computer have open slots to put in RAM memory, I’ve thought about buying some and installing them on to my computer.
    Will the preview screen on Premiere Pro 2.0 then run better if I add more RAM? If so how much RAM will be requeiered to eliminate all the lag from the preview screen even if I’m using a lot of effects?
    The maximum amount of RAM for my computer is 4GB.
    Thanks in advance!

    Mark Hollis replied 16 years, 9 months ago 3 Members · 3 Replies
  • 3 Replies
  • Vince Becquiot

    July 31, 2009 at 5:10 am

    RAM is needed, the more the better. 4GB minimum for the latest CS3/4.

    But I don’t know about your budget… Throwing RAM at this system is honestly a waste and probably won’t help you much.

    Processing is likely what you need the most, but of course you need RAM as well.

    Are you looking for smooth playback after rendering or without it?

    WMV is tuff because it’s not native, for all I know you could be rendering to uncompressed, and that’s a lot of processing.

    So, at least a core 2 duo (core 2 quad better), 4 Gigs of RAM, a good graphics card, a separate hard drive for footage and scratch disks (at least SATA, internal)

    Vince Becquiot

    Kaptis Studios
    San Francisco – Bay Area

  • Jesper Karlsson

    July 31, 2009 at 10:51 am

    Thanks Vince for the quick respond!

    No, when the movie is rendered it plays out just fine, it’s on the preview screen the problem lies.

    It’s just that I can sometimes barely see anything from what I’m editing until the movie is rendered, since the preview screen lags so much.

    I’ve also checked my system and it said that I have a Core Processor plus my graphics card shouldn’t be that much out of date for Premiere 2.0. So will a harddrive and some extra RAM do the trick?

  • Mark Hollis

    July 31, 2009 at 12:50 pm

    I get the same thing sometimes with Premiere Pro 1.5 on a system with 2G of system RAM.

    Adding RAM is always a good idea and you are probably “underpowered” with your system. If you can double the amount of system RAM you have, you will notice that everything is less sluggish and you will need your hard drive less for virtual memory or “scratch disk memory” in general.

    I usually go to Crucial’s website to determine how much RAM I have and how much I can add. Crucial has a nice little widget that you can download that will determine everything for you. This is not to suggest that you must buy from them — but they will give you the exact specifications for the computer you have.

    I would not purchase RAM from any company that does not offer a 100% no-questions-asked lifetime warranty on RAM.

    I note the same issues with version 1.5 and many of these are attributed to the application “conforming” material that I have added to a bin. Additionally, I notice that the application will get sluggish when I have lots of layers in an edit.

    Adobe applications sometimes do not release memory when they’re working and the best way to clear out things is to exit the application and then start it up again. If you are running several applications (Photoshop, Illustrator, a web browser and so on) it is sometimes helpful to log out completely and then log back in, or do a restart sometime in the middle of your day (assuming you’re editing all day). This clears out all allocated RAM that ought to have been released to the system but wasn’t because one application or another doesn’t clean up well after itself.

    Vince is correct that maxing out your RAM might be expensive and the theoretical limit of a Windows 32-bit application is 4G of system RAM. I doubt that Premiere can actually use more than 3G of RAM though, so the maximum useful RAM you can put in your system is 3G.

    But if you must add RAM in pairs for your computer, Crucial will tell you that and you should follow their directions, adding 4G to get 3G of useful RAM.

    What if there were no hypothetical questions?

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