MB for video editing

rb56

Senior member
Oct 27, 2000
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I'm looking to replace my MSI Turbo and Duron. I'm doing a lot more video rendering and would like to speed up the process a bit. ;) I'm thinking about a 1800XP but would like some ideas for MB. No OC'ing for this one, and it has to be stable.

rb56
 

zzzz

Diamond Member
Sep 1, 2000
5,498
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get a dual MP mobo. Tyan.
For single cpu ABit KG7-raid but it is older Amd 761 chipset.
 

rb56

Senior member
Oct 27, 2000
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I have thought about the Tyan. I wonder how much of an improvement it would be with a couple of 1200MP's ($86 apiece and newegg). What do you think?

rb56
 

ShinSa

Senior member
Jan 23, 2002
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I havent came across any editing program that actually takes from dual processors so your benefit would be minimal for the price you pay.

Instead look for a fast hard drive under SCSI or even possible RAID to see speed improvements.
 

JustinLerner

Senior member
Mar 15, 2002
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Gotta agree, yet differ from ShinSa.

To render, compress, encode, do you want to let your PC crank through the work while you wait?
Although most video editing programs don't take advantage of SMP capabilities, all your other programs will still function while your rendering and encoding is taking place if you have multiple CPU's. Translation: you can still use your PC while the rendering or encoding/compression takes place if you follow the other suggestions at bottom. (The Intel SMP spec incorporates an I/O APIC -- Asynchronous Programmabel Interrupt Controller - which allows something like 50 IRQ's that function differently from a regular IRQ. A standard PIC (15 IRQ's) only allows a single IRQ to function with one device at a time, even with IRQ 'sharing', which uses 'time slices' of IRQ's from multiple devices using the same IRQ [under ACPI].) Additionally, since each process has at least one thread, having multiple CPU's allows multiple thread handling better, or better multitasking.

ShinSa is sortof right about using SCSI though. Because if you really want to do video editing, then you should dedicate at least two new, fast, individual SCSI drives of the same size for video editing. This is so you can work from one drive to the other without interruption. Since IDE would need three IDE channels or more, this becomes more and more unpractical with IDE. Also your primary boot/system drive and swap file/pagefile/drive caching should be independent of the editing drives. RAID may be unecessary when properly dedicating and configuring multiple SCSI drives, although having two RAID 0 arrays for editing is even better. This will also allow you to use your PC while it's doing time consuming functions. If you use RAID, buy hardware RAID.