Help me Build a VIDEO EDITING system!

lepper boy

Golden Member
Nov 2, 1999
1,877
0
76
What is the best to use? p4 ? or AMD? what is a good video caputre card etc?? good software? best platform to use??

Price wise looking at i'm thinking 1500$ for complete system, (no monitor or keyboard/mouse in that system)
 

oLLie

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2001
5,203
1
0
Intel gets slightly higher marks w/ video encoding, but the diff is sorta small for the big price difference. For video editing, you can't go wrong w/ tons of ram, and a huge RAID hard drive array.
 

Wolfsraider

Diamond Member
Jan 27, 2002
8,305
0
76
how about this from googlegear or any others (i find this easier for me)

1x Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 Processor (Northwood) 1.6GHz, 400MHz FSB, Socket 478 (No Memory) Retail
$141.00



1x Abit TH7II-Raid i850 P4 Skt478 RDRAM ATX Motherboard w/Audio, RAID Retail
$177.50


4x Samsung Original RAMBUS 256MB 800MHz 8-Device Memory
$304.00


1x Antec SX1040B SOHO File Mid-Tower Server Case (Black)
$138.99


1x ATI All-in-Wonder Radeon 8500DV 64MB DDR Video Card w/DVI, Video in & Video out Retail
$338.95


1x Creative Labs Sound Blaster Audigy PCI Sound Card w/FireWire port
$63.50


1x Pioneer 16x DVD 40x CD, EIDE, slot load, internal, DVD-106S
$63.50

1x Lite-On LTR-32123S 32x12x40 EIDE CD-RW Drive w/Software Retail
$96.75



Subtotal: $1480.17

depends on your wants and needs though =nice system ;)
 

Wolfsraider

Diamond Member
Jan 27, 2002
8,305
0
76
how about this for $1608.00 and get the best of both worlds;)

Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 Processor (Northwood) 1.6GHz, 400MHz FSB, Socket 478 (No Memory) Retail
$141.00 $141.00

Abit TH7II-Raid i850 P4 Skt478 RDRAM ATX Motherboard w/Audio, RAID Retail
$177.50 $177.50

Samsung Original RAMBUS 256MB 800MHz 8-Device Memory
$76.00 $304.00

Maxtor DiamondMax Plus D740X 6L080J4 80GB Ultra ATA/133 7200RPM Hard Drive
$141.99 $283.98

Antec SX1040B SOHO File Mid-Tower Server Case (Black)
$138.99 $138.99

ATI All-in-Wonder Radeon 8500DV 64MB DDR Video Card w/DVI, Video in & Video out Retail
$338.95 $338.95

Creative Labs Sound Blaster Audigy PCI Sound Card w/FireWire port
$63.50 $63.50

Pioneer 16x DVD 40x CD, EIDE, slot load, internal, DVD-106S
$63.50 $63.50

Lite-On LTR-32123S 32x12x40 EIDE CD-RW Drive w/Software Retail
$96.75 $96.75

Subtotal: $1608.17

hope this helps

this includes 2 80 gig harddrives raided;)

either way is nice solid setup but you could go with a cheaper case or even drop video down to ati aiw radeon 7500 to save a few bucks

anyway thiese are what i would recomend

hope it helps
 

lepper boy

Golden Member
Nov 2, 1999
1,877
0
76
wow thanks for the info so far..... question, when you go and look at Newegg or other sites they talk about a video caputure card. do you need one of those? or would like the radeon 8500 work just as well?
dave
 

RyanB18

Senior member
Aug 23, 2001
378
0
76
from what i have heard, radeon 8500 dv is great for video capture/gaming. it has firewire as well good software.
 

SolrFlare24

Member
Feb 13, 2002
95
0
0
Well the first truth is if you are interested in building a Video Editing system you would be better off with a *looks around* MAC. I don't use Macs much myself but I will hand it to them in the multimedia department.

Now that said, building a PC for video editing...first thing you'll probably want is a good speed P4 processor. The P4s in at least my personal opinion do a little better with heavy video editing than an Athlon XP...but thats personal opinion, at high speeds you could get away with either....However, a P4 coupled with Rambus will probably get you better performance than an Athlon XP with DDR. If you were to go the P4 route I'd go all out with Rambus for video editing, otherwise go Athlon XP and get a faster proccessor for your money.

Also you'd want to make sure you get plenty of RAM as video editing is one of those few areas where RAM at the 512mb and beyond level will continue to show a difference.

For a video card, you'd definately want the Radeon 8500dv All in Wonder card. Your comment about just getting by with a pure 8500...well the All in Wonder cards are designed around video input where as the plain 8500 cards are essentially gaming cards with some extra video stuff. If you really want good video editing, forking out the extra cash for the 8500DV is definately worth it.

Hmmm as for other stuff....well sound might be of big importance to you...in that case I'd suggest something like an Creative Audigy Platinum(or Extigy) or Game Theater XP to give you the maximum amount of audio flexability.

As for drives and the like....since your doing video editing, I'd figure at least a DVD-rom drive and CD burner would be a must. DVD rom drive giving you that lovely DVD movie input and well *cough* ripping *cough* and of course CD burner for storage purposes. However, if you want to do video editing so you can pump stuff out for DVD players, you may want to consider a DVD Burning drive. If a DVD Burner is of interest for you, here is the basic rundown on the two formats to choose from:

DVD-RW : Burns CDRs, CDRWs, DVD-Rs, and DVD-RWs. Its not too bad a format and its compatable with most DVD players(only some older/cheap Players cause issues). Main downside outside of some incompatability is that the DVD movie formating is only OK...it gets the job done decently though.

DVD+RW : Burns CDRs, CDRWs, DVD+RWs. +RW is a much better movie burning format. It has much better compatability than -RW and the DVD movie formatting is much much better. However, +RW has one major flaw....currently it does not have write once +R discs. This means two things. 1) you have to buy rewritable media for all your DVDs and 2) rewritable media has less reflectivity that write-once media, so the DVD you burn may not work on the first try in some DVD players because it simply isn't reflective enough. The one thing to note though is that my understanding is very soon the +RW format will begin supporting new write-once +R media. Once +RW gets +R writing capabilities it will be vastly superior in my opinion. Once +R hits the market some +RW drive makers will release firmware updates so you can burn +R in drives bought now but its not a garantee.

My recommendation if you were interested in buying a DVD burner for your video editing, either buy a DVD-RW now or wait a bit for +R media and drives to hit the market then buy DVD+RW. Also there is another format DVD-RAM but -RW and +RW are the ways you go if you want to make DVD movie discs. If DVD burners aren't your bag quite yet, then just go for a CD burner at least...that way you have Video Disc capability at least :)

Anyway, good luck building your system...should be fun.
 

LethalWolfe

Diamond Member
Apr 14, 2001
3,679
0
0
What are you going to be editing? MiniDV? How often are you going to be editing? I'd suggest going to Matrox and checking out the Matrox RT2500, and going to the Canopus website and checkingout their DV Raptor, and DV RaptorRT products. Do you want analog capture ability too? When you buy a "prosumer" level card (like the Matrox, or Canopus cards I mentioned) you'll get Premeire 6.0 and a bunch of other software that you won't get if you buy something like the 8500DV. Also, if editing becomes a hobby you'll quickly out grow the 8500DV (or any other 3D card that can capture video too) and the "comsumer" level editing software.

When you go to the Matrox and/or Canopus site check out their recommended system specs and build yer system following those (unless, of course, you like yer computer crashing and not working correctly ;)).

**Shameless plug** I'm selling my RT2500, go Here, if you might be interested in buying it.

Building a quality video editing rig is a bit trickier than building a gaming/general purpose rig, so just make sure all the parts you look at are OK'd by the manufacturer of the capture card you get.

Lethal
 

lepper boy

Golden Member
Nov 2, 1999
1,877
0
76
Wow...... That is a lot of info.. i'm hunting up the specifactions page at matrox and the other site right now...... thanks!!!!!!
dave