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(another) Video Editing PC help
I see that every 2 weeks another one of these questions are posted on the board... Maybe some sort of buyer's guide/sticky should be posted (it would have to constantly be updated though, as technology advances quickly)
Well, I need some help for my specific situation. I'm working on a biographical documentary and I need to buy a pc to edit the video. Here's some specific details: I will not be filming in HD (maybe I will sometime in the future). The PC will be dedicated to video editing only. I will use Adobe Premier Elements 4. I don't plan on having any heavy 3D digital effects. I will have 50+ hours of footage that will need to be edited. The final production will be between 1.5 hr to 5 hrs. in length. I'm able to spend up to $1,400 for a PC. I did a lot of research and here's the PC that I found. Is it fast enough? Is it a 'good deal'? Overkill? HP Pavilion Elite m9200t customizable Desktop PC KL649AV#ABA * Genuine Windows Vista Home Premium with Service Pack 1 (64-bit) * Intel(R) Core(TM) 2 Quad processor Q9300 * 4GB DDR2-800MHz dual channel SDRAM (4x1024) * 512MB NVIDIA GeForce 8600GT, TV-out, DVI-I, HDMI * 802.11 b/g USB Wireless LAN card * 750GB 7200 rpm SATA 3Gb/s hard drive * LightScribe 16X max. DVD+/-R/RW SuperMulti drive * 15-in-1 memory card reader, 2 USB, 1394, video, audio * ATSC-NTSC TV tuner with PVR, FM tuner, remote * Sound Blaster X-Fi XtremeGamer * Norton Internet Security(TM) 2008 - 15 month * Microsoft(R) Works 9.0 * HP keyboard and HP optical mouse * HP Home & Home Office Store in-box envelope HP Deskjet D1560 Printer - FREE Total: $1,139.98 Thanks in advance! NOTE: I posted this question on a different board, but I'm looking for a second opinion from this board (You Guys Are Great!) http://videomaker.com/community/foru...g-pc?replies=6 |
Add at least 2 hard disks to that setup, one smallish one for OS/programs and another one for preview/scratch. Maybe dump the SB audio card and use on-board audio if the mobo supports that. Why a TV tuner on an editing machine? Be careful with Norton Internet Security and always turn it off before editing.
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Well the TV tuner comes with the package from HP...
Do you mean I should have a total of 3 Hard Drives?, I plan on adding a small (250 GB) drive for OS/programs. Do I need a 3rd one? Norton Internet Security conflicts with editing programs? or is it just that it eats memory? |
Everything looks OK....I'm not familiar with Premier, but if it was me (if you haven't already)...I'd make sure it's gonna work OK with Vista, your video card and the fire-wire port you'll be using.
You should be OK with 2 drives...1/OS, 1/media. If you wanted a little more speed you could add a third and RAID the media drives together, but if you're only editing DV it's not required. Personally, I would never install Norton on any of my machines. |
With only 2 disks you should be OK for limited DV work, let's say up to 3 tracks, depending on the fill rate of your 2-nd disk. For more complex projects or HDV you definitely need more physical disks. I would not consider a case that does not allow at least 5 internal disks plus a DVD burner. I don't know if the HP model offers that expansion capability.
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ok thnx for the advice
Mike: I double-checked if Adobe Premire Elements 4 was compatible with Vista, and it said that its only compatible in the 32-bit mode. Do you know what effect that will have on my speed? I think a 32 bit os only recognizes 2 GB of ram.. |
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hmm I wish HP would offer this package with XP.... :(
But there's something I don't understand. People who edit HD videos all have to use Windows Vista (64-bit) ?? I thought the consensus was not to use Vista until it gets stable. What do you do if you need more than 3 GB of ram to edit HD? Get a Mac? EDIT: I think I sorta found the answer to my own questions.... http://www.dvinfo.net/conf/showthread.php?t=122511 |
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Vista is fine. I'm using vista x64 with CS3 but I don't know for sure if Premiere Elements works well with it though. This would be a good thing to check.
For the computer: -Skip the sound card -Skip the TV tuner -Skip the memory card reader (unless you really want it) -Skip Works (uninstall it if you cannot request it remove) -Skip Norton -Add a smaller hard drive for programs/OS and then use the 750 for media. |
Devin:
When you say i should "skip" these stuff do you mean that they will slow-down my computer making it harder to do my job, or do you mean they're unnecessary and i shouldn't waste money on them? |
I would think he means you don't need them, for your application you're just not going to use them...only one that's going to slow down your system is Norton. I would keep the card reader...I use mine all the time. With HP, you might not have the choice on those components though.
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The Q9300 is really not a prefered choice - the Q9450 is soo much better for encoding. The Q9300 has just half the cache size - and not the full SSE4 support.
// Lz |
With 50 hrs of footage, a large internal/external HDD would be a possibly good thing to research. If this computer is to be used exclusively for editing, then Norton is a big mnus...
As to the intel 9300 vs the 9450, while I'd agree with what's said, unless you are going to be doing a lot of compressing or converting of video files, for your situation you would probably not notice the difference. OTOH, if you have the budget, go for it. Me, I might use the xtra money for a decent used pro monitor on ebay with at least S-video, if not full component inputs and blue check, etc. |
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