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H.264 premiere pro 2.0
H.264 premiere pro 2.0








h.264 premiere pro 2.0 h.264 premiere pro 2.0

I know its not a true apples to apples comparison. Twice the cores/threads at a lower speed is a little faster with encoding. It was converted to an H.264 4K 60 FPS video with the YouTube preset in Premier Pro CC. The source video project used was a 4K 60 FPS gameplay video 8 minutes and 25 seconds long. R7 3800X PBO Enabled and 1usmus power plan usedĪsus TUF Gaming X570-Plus (Wi-Fi) ATX Motherboard All the unnecessary stuff in startup was disabled and the system were rebooted prior to testing.

H.264 PREMIERE PRO 2.0 DRIVERS

Both systems had the latest drivers and latest version of Windows 10 Pro. Today I had a chance to compare my i7-6700K system to a R7 3800X system using H.264 encoding using the same project in Adobe Premiere Pro CC. Performance is up to 60% faster when using only the CPU, but even with Neat Video set to use both the CPU and GPU (with a NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti) we still saw a 20-30% performance gain with Ryzen over a comparably priced Intel CPU. If you use Neat Video, there is simply no contest: use an AMD Ryzen 3rd generation processor. This is expected to be bundled into one of the next few Premiere Pro releases, at which point we may find that the CPU no longer makes more than a minor impact on performance when working with RED footage.ĭo you use Neat Video for noise reduction? However, this is one area that is highly subject to change since RED is working on moving more of the processing of RED media from the CPU to the GPU. Here, the higher raw performance of the new AMD Ryzen CPUs allows it to take a significant lead over the Intel 9th gen CPUs - although they can't quite catch up with the higher-end (and much more expensive) AMD Threadripper or Intel X-series CPUs. This feature isn't available on AMD processors (or on the Intel X-series), which makes CPUs like the Intel Core i9 9900K simply the best option for this type of media. In this case, the Intel 9th Gen CPUs have a pretty commanding lead (especially with 10-bit footage) due to the fact that Premiere Pro supports hardware acceleration of H.264 and H.265 (HEVC) media via Intel Quick Sync.










H.264 premiere pro 2.0