Roger Gunkel
September 20th, 2016, 05:04 PM
After editing on the same system for the last 3 years, the increase in sophistication of our wedding work was making our faithful system creak a bit. With more cameras being used for weddings and schools, together with more audio recorders, it was sometimes a bit much for the AMD quad core cpu, 8gb of ram and an AMD graphics card, resulting in annoying lock ups from time to time. Now that we also have two 4K cams, it would only play back 4K footage at a stuttering pace. A steady backlog of weddings to be edited finally decided us to get a new system alongside the old, so that we could both edit at the same time, with the new system able to handle the more demanding jobs.
Funds were somewhat limited, but we finally settled on an Intel i7-6700 @ 3.4GHz 16gb DD4 ram and an Nvidea GeForce GT 740 with 4GHz onboard ram. We also added two HD monitors as 4K would be out of our budget and we will be dropping 4K footage down to HD after editing anyway. I had the computer built by a company locally that I know, to avoid any additional bloatware and other nasties. They persuaded me against my better judgement to upgrade from Win7 to Win10, by offing to revert to Win7 if I wasn't happy or my preferred software wouldn't run.
Two days after ordering, it was ready so I collected and spent the day installing my preferred NLE Magix Movie Edit ProX7, along with Mercalli 4 image stabilizing software, NewBlueFX and Photoshop for stills. Everything installed and ran perfectly and there was a massive difference in all processing speeds. Out of interest I downloaded a 30 minute 4K clip from a recent unedited wedding, which ran very smoothly. I then copied the clip to 2 more parallel video tracks to see if it would run 3 streams of 4K. Again very smooth with no stuttering, so we are now able to exploit the cropping possibilities of 4K for HD output.
For school and theatre productions, we normally use 3-5 cameras, to follow the action in closeup plus full stage coverage. For the next one, we will also experiment with one 4K full stage camera in addition, so that we can carry out all closeup and cast movements with key framed crops in post production. It should make a huge saving in time both at the filming and PP stages.
The other advantage of the new system is that rendering to MP4 from HD multi camera timelines has now been speeded up by 70%, as has output to DVD. So far, Win 10 has been extremely docile and easy to use, with much faster boot up and access times. All in all a good upgrade, the only downside being that Claire and I are now competing for who uses the new system.
Roger
Funds were somewhat limited, but we finally settled on an Intel i7-6700 @ 3.4GHz 16gb DD4 ram and an Nvidea GeForce GT 740 with 4GHz onboard ram. We also added two HD monitors as 4K would be out of our budget and we will be dropping 4K footage down to HD after editing anyway. I had the computer built by a company locally that I know, to avoid any additional bloatware and other nasties. They persuaded me against my better judgement to upgrade from Win7 to Win10, by offing to revert to Win7 if I wasn't happy or my preferred software wouldn't run.
Two days after ordering, it was ready so I collected and spent the day installing my preferred NLE Magix Movie Edit ProX7, along with Mercalli 4 image stabilizing software, NewBlueFX and Photoshop for stills. Everything installed and ran perfectly and there was a massive difference in all processing speeds. Out of interest I downloaded a 30 minute 4K clip from a recent unedited wedding, which ran very smoothly. I then copied the clip to 2 more parallel video tracks to see if it would run 3 streams of 4K. Again very smooth with no stuttering, so we are now able to exploit the cropping possibilities of 4K for HD output.
For school and theatre productions, we normally use 3-5 cameras, to follow the action in closeup plus full stage coverage. For the next one, we will also experiment with one 4K full stage camera in addition, so that we can carry out all closeup and cast movements with key framed crops in post production. It should make a huge saving in time both at the filming and PP stages.
The other advantage of the new system is that rendering to MP4 from HD multi camera timelines has now been speeded up by 70%, as has output to DVD. So far, Win 10 has been extremely docile and easy to use, with much faster boot up and access times. All in all a good upgrade, the only downside being that Claire and I are now competing for who uses the new system.
Roger