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Activity Forums Adobe After Effects Any of you using a Ryzen 7 or 5 processor for Ae….how is it working out ?

  • Any of you using a Ryzen 7 or 5 processor for Ae….how is it working out ?

    Posted by Vik Kum on May 3, 2023 at 5:44 am

    Any of you using a Ryzen 7 or 5 processors for Ae work. Plz comment what proc you have.
    How is the smoothness and timeline scrub and playback. How responsive is the system. Whats the render time ratio. Like 1:4 as in a 1 minute project takes 4 mins to render or what is your ratio ?

    Thanks

    Boston Cainfra replied 1 year, 9 months ago 3 Members · 5 Replies
  • 5 Replies
  • Shahid shahan

    May 4, 2023 at 6:47 pm

    Hey vik,

    I think this is second time I’m answering your discussion about it.

    Based on my previous experience with ryzen 7.

    Ryzen 7 and 5 processors are capable processors that can handle complex video editing and motion graphics workloads in After Effects. The exact performance of the processor will depend on the specific model and configuration of your computer, as well as the complexity of your project.

    In general, a higher-end Ryzen processor will offer better performance than a lower-end one. This will result in a smoother timeline scrub and playback, as well as a more responsive system overall. However, the exact performance will depend on the specific project you are working on and the number of effects and layers you have in your composition.

    When it comes to render time ratio, there is no fixed ratio that can be applied universally as it varies based on the complexity of the project and the hardware you are using. However, in general, a 1:4 render time ratio (i.e., a 1 minute project takes 4 minutes to render) is a good benchmark to aim for. This means that a 10-minute project would take around 40 minutes to render. However, this can vary depending on the complexity of the project, the rendering settings, and the hardware being used.

    Shahan

  • Boston Cainfra

    May 5, 2023 at 2:25 am

    Hello<div>

    The smoothness of timeline scrubbing and playback in Adobe After Effects can depend on a number of factors, including the complexity of your project, the performance of your computer, and the settings you have chosen for previewing your work. Generally speaking, if you have a powerful computer with sufficient RAM and a dedicated graphics card, you should be able to achieve relatively smooth scrubbing and playback, especially if you use the RAM Preview feature in After Effects.

    As for the responsiveness of the system, this can also vary depending on your hardware and software configuration. If you have optimized your system settings and are working with a project that is within the limits of your computer’s capabilities, you should generally experience good performance and responsiveness.

    Regarding render time, the ratio of render time to project length can vary greatly depending on the complexity of the project, the effects used, and the settings chosen for rendering. As a rough estimate, a 1-minute project may take anywhere from a few minutes to several hours or more to render, depending on these factors. It’s important to optimize your render settings and use the most efficient rendering methods possible to minimize render times.

    </div>

  • Vik Kum

    May 5, 2023 at 6:28 am

    @ Shahan > So what if your answering 2nd time ??. Who asked you ? And this question is on the Ae forum and not Pre Pro. And you are answering bec you want to answer on your own, nobody asked for your specific opinion, so dont make it sound like its a chore. And plus this is about who HAS A RYZEN AND IS ACTUALLY USING ONE for Ae to chime in. Yet your here moaning that your having to answer 2nd time though you dont even have a Ryzen !!. Your trying to just up your post count is it ?

    Im not here for your opinion exclusively and neither is it the last word that one should follow. Let the others who’ve actually used A RYZEN chime in, read the title again.

    Ive been editing video for 18 years diligently from when Vegas Pro started, and your answers you’ve posted are blanket general consensus and which even beginner editors know and im very well aware off. Not a newbie to hardware and editing here. But even an expert will need to ask someone who has a Ryzen, to find out how it performs, bec of the differences with QSV in intel etc.

    Your answers such as…..it depends on the project (i know res/framerate/bit depth all matter)…..the more powerful the processor the easier it will edit (no crap Einstein LOL)…. more cores are more favoured (really ? not actually, but we will talk about that another day)…… these are rudimentary ideas which google will answer on the top line. Ive got the rest of my rig decked out with Multiple NVMes and SSDs and good enough ram, and only want to choose betw an Intel or a Ryzen CPU. I know enough to tweak a lowly i3 to perform well with my 4K footage in
    Pr and Ae and it has served me all these days….im upgrading but when
    jumping to AMD i dont want to risk a processor that just wont play or
    cant interpret footage at all bec of hardware implementations even
    though its 5 times more powerful than my i3 and then ill have to scrap it and go i3 lol ?

    I can very well afford to safely buy the 12700 or 13700 INTEL….but couldnt bec of power guzzling….i have to run on Solar and have about 500w coming in from my 2kw of panels on my roof. Those processors run hot and need more cooling units and higher PSUs which will ramp up power much higher.

    Ive seen powerful CPU’s struggle with a footage which a simpler computer was able to edit smoothly. Also in the Pr Pro forum thread i asked you…. Have you actually used a Ryzen with Pr Pro and you are like….SURE…..I WORK WITH AN INTEL 10900 something ….!!!!!!!! Seriously ?

  • Shahid shahan

    May 5, 2023 at 7:00 am

    Hey @vik-kum

    My intention was not to hurt you. I thought you were posting about the same thing again. I apologize for that. It was a different question, but I felt it was similar. I apologize for that as well. And as for my answer, I am here to provide answers to your questions. You are thinking wrong. Don’t think that way, brother. And as for the answer, you agree with me.?

    Shahan

  • Boston Cainfra

    May 6, 2023 at 9:13 am

    Hmm

    I understand you

    Some higher GPU laptops appeared not to be able run it else slowing down the PC

    Getting hot and so on and people who actually worked with these software won’t know until they changed there PC then boom, they’re surprised to see that happening to a bigger PC

    Let me know if it has been solved and my earlier response helped out

    THANKS

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