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  • Can anyone analyze my NLE System?

    Posted by George Cahill iii on December 11, 2009 at 8:59 pm

    I’m having some serious issues with my NLE system & need help…and yes, there’s a deadline looming!
    I definitely need someone with more in-depth knowledge…anyone know of a company or individual that does consultation in person or via phone/VOIP in the Tampa/Clearwater Florida area…Please respond and THANK YOU in advance!

    Mr. Greenjeans
    The All-New Captain Kangaroo Show

    SYSTEM INFO
    Adobe CS4 Production Premium -updated
    Matrox rt2x -latest drivers

    PC WIZARD 2009 INFO
    Mainboard : Asus P5W DH Deluxe
    Chipset : Intel i975X
    Processor : Intel Core 2 Duo E6700 @ 2666 MHz
    Physical Memory : 4096 MB (4 x 1024 DDR2-SDRAM )
    Video Card : ATI Radeon HD 3800 Series
    Hard Disk : External (250 GB)
    Hard Disk : Hitachi (250 GB)
    Hard Disk : WDC (250 GB)
    Hard Disk : External (2000 GB)
    Hard Disk : SAMSUNG (500 GB)
    DVD-Rom Drive : LITE-ON DVDRW LH-20A1H
    DVD-Rom Drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-810SA
    Monitor Type : LCM-19v7 – 19 inches
    Network Card : MV88SE614x PCIe to SATA2 controller Yukon 88E8053 PCIe Gigabit Ethernet Controller (Copper)
    Network Card : MV88SE614x PCIe to SATA2 controller Yukon 88E8053 PCIe Gigabit Ethernet Controller (Copper)
    Operating System : Microsoft Windows XP Professional 5.01.2600 Service Pack 3
    DirectX : Version 9.0c (July 2007)

    ——————
    DIRECTX System Information
    ——————
    Time of this report: 12/11/2009, 15:15:28
    Machine name: INVINC10
    Operating System: Windows XP Professional (5.1, Build 2600) Service Pack 3 (2600.xpsp_sp3_gdr.090804-1435)
    Language: English (Regional Setting: English)
    System Manufacturer: ASUSTEK COMPUTER INC
    System Model: P5W DH Deluxe
    BIOS: BIOS Date: 07/10/08 11:03:49 Ver: 08.00.12
    Processor: Intel(R) Core(TM)2 CPU 6700 @ 2.66GHz (2 CPUs)
    Memory: 3200MB RAM
    Page File: 684MB used, 4508MB available
    Windows Dir: I:\WINDOWS
    DirectX Version: DirectX 9.0c (4.09.0000.0904)
    DX Setup Parameters: Not found
    DxDiag Version: 5.03.2600.5512 32bit Unicode

    George Cahill
    “If all the world’s a stage,I want better lighting…and a better agent!”

    George Cahill iii replied 16 years, 5 months ago 4 Members · 5 Replies
  • 5 Replies
  • Ann Bens

    December 11, 2009 at 9:13 pm

    Do you have the same issues with a non Matrox project?
    I.m.o you dont need a Matrox with a 975. I have a 940 with 12 gig RAM and edit HDV like DV, dont even have to render Magic Bullet Looks for preview.

  • Joseph Donnelly

    December 11, 2009 at 10:29 pm

    What precisely is the issue? I’ve had tons of weird things crop up since migrating to CS4, so specifics would be helpful.

    Joseph Donnelly
    Editor

  • George Cahill iii

    December 13, 2009 at 11:50 pm

    My apologies for not getting back to you both but my internet was out.

    The main problem is very slow processing & crashes…a friend came by and did a couple of tweaks & it seems to be running somewhat better but I just imagined this setup would fly…perhaps I was being unrealistic.
    Ann, what setup are you running and HOW IN THE WORLD did you manage to run 12GIG on your machine?

    Thanks again for both of you being willing to help.

    Sincerely,
    George Cahill

    George Cahill
    “If all the world’s a stage,I want better lighting…and a better agent!”

  • James Stone

    December 14, 2009 at 6:42 pm

    The single most important factor in a video editing rig is managing your hard disks, and how CS4 uses them.

    Video editing invloves creating preview files of your raw video to make the editing easier. If your hard disks are nearly full they are probably fragmented. If you are using the default settings in CS4, all of your raw video and preview files are on the same disk. This results in slow performance and frequent crashes, as a single hard drive (even on the best system) cannot keep up with the demand for data that the editor is thowing at it.

    The solution is to use a different hard drive for each function – one for captured video, another for captured audio, another for video previews, and another for audio previews. (plus one for your system, and another for output files – that’s six physical hard drives if you are counting) This way, each function of your editor can operate at maximum speed, and thus you will have fewer crashes. It really works. In my opinon, this should be the minimum specification for any serious editing rig.

    Also – defrag regularly, and don’t let your drives get more than 70% full or you will have problems.

    Here is the article that discusses the issue:
    https://help.adobe.com/en_US/PremierePro/4.0/WS369BD79A-5DF9-48d8-9F49-6B56026087C8.html#WS28D9CEC8-4ABC-41cd-BAEF-07859C21DA59

    I went from having numerous crashes per day, to maybe one a month with the new system.

    I also am running 12GB of RAM – i7 920 processor, 64 bit Vista.

    Works like a champ, but the memory and processor are only part of the equation.

  • George Cahill iii

    December 14, 2009 at 10:07 pm

    Thanks James,
    excellent article and advise! I defrag often and use multiple drives, however, I now realize, not as efficiently as I should.

    Thanks again to all of you for your invaluable help.

    Mr. Greenjeans
    The All-New Captain Kangaroo Show

    George Cahill
    “If all the world’s a stage,I want better lighting…and a better agent!”

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