Originally posted by: JoshRtek3
It really all depends on what type of video editing you want to do. If it's for a hobby only, then you really don't need that powerful of a system. Just get a half gig of RAM, a good editing program, a good quality DV camera, decently fast P4 or Athlon, a 64 MB video card, and two big hard drives (one for the system, and the other for A/V capture)...
Originally posted by: sonoma1993
im into video editing also, i want to take family video and tranfer them todo dvd, currently i have a athlon 64 3200+ sktt 939 (winchester) the motherboard im using is the abit av8-3rd eye with the via kt800. the harddrive im using is a wd raptor 10,000rpm 36.7gb (system/apps) and a maxtor 300mb 7200rpm 16mb harddrive(video/games). my question is would i get faster encoding/decoding quality using a nforce 3 chipset or the via chipset. when i had my am athlon 64 3200+ skt 754 using a chaintech nforce 250, im using studio 9, , with the my skt 939 setup, my read rate is 10779 Kbyte/sec write 58539 Kbyte sec and my max safe lvl is 9701Kbyte/sec, when i had my skt 754 setup my read was somewere in the 50,000kbyte/sec and write was somewere aeound 50000 kbyte/sec and the max safe was up there too. I thinking im getting these odds numbers with the via chippset cuz im using the silicon 3114 sata and it using the pci buy or whatever it is, and on the nforce the sata was built into the northbridge so it used the hypertransport. so would it be better if i upgrade my motherboard to a nforce 3 motherboard? ii hope u guys understand what i wrote.
Originally posted by: bob4432
Originally posted by: JoshRtek3
It really all depends on what type of video editing you want to do. If it's for a hobby only, then you really don't need that powerful of a system. Just get a half gig of RAM, a good editing program, a good quality DV camera, decently fast P4 or Athlon, a 64 MB video card, and two big hard drives (one for the system, and the other for A/V capture)...
you would want 1GB of ram
Originally posted by: Accord99
Get two HDs (but don't RAID them), so you can have one drive reading and the other writing. Should greatly improve performance for anytime you have streaming operations with a large video file.
512Mb will not cut it for video editing.
Originally posted by: Dopefiend
Originally posted by: bob4432
Originally posted by: JoshRtek3
It really all depends on what type of video editing you want to do. If it's for a hobby only, then you really don't need that powerful of a system. Just get a half gig of RAM, a good editing program, a good quality DV camera, decently fast P4 or Athlon, a 64 MB video card, and two big hard drives (one for the system, and the other for A/V capture)...
you would want 1GB of ram
:thumbsup: 512Mb will not cut it for video editing.
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Re: using two hdds.
Is the editing software installed onto the 2nd hdd or do you just tell the software to do the crunching there?
Thanks again for all the info/help.
Originally posted by: Accord99
Get two HDs (but don't RAID them), so you can have one drive reading and the other writing. Should greatly improve performance for anytime you have streaming operations with a large video file.
Originally posted by: VTrider
Originally posted by: Accord99
Get two HDs (but don't RAID them), so you can have one drive reading and the other writing. Should greatly improve performance for anytime you have streaming operations with a large video file.
Are you saying this would move large video files faster than a RAID 0 array?
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: VTrider
Originally posted by: Accord99
Get two HDs (but don't RAID them), so you can have one drive reading and the other writing. Should greatly improve performance for anytime you have streaming operations with a large video file.
Are you saying this would move large video files faster than a RAID 0 array?
Depends on what you're doing and what the array is attached to.
RAID0 (I'm assuming a 2-disk RAID0) doubles the STR of the disks involved. If you were reading from and writing to the same RAID0 (since your system sees it like a single hard drive), you'd run into the same problem as with two drives on the same channel -- the disks can't read and write simultaneously, so it greatly drops your throughput (and it also puts a lot of extra strain on the read/write heads, as they have to seek back and forth constantly while this is going on). In this case, you might actually be better off with two separate drives.
However, loading a file from the RAID0, or writing a file to the RAID0 (if the source was another drive in the system) would be faster. Fastest of all would be to have two RAID0s, and read from one and write to the other. But you would need one to be attached to the chipset directly, or else the limited PCI bus bandwidth would start to constrain you (or you would need both to be on PCI-X or PCI Express buses, which have more bandwidth to begin with).
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Going to build a basic machine for my daughter, nothing too fancy. I was thinking along the lines of a P4, 2.8, intel board, 1 GB RAM, 9600XT, DVD burner and a WD120JB.
I am not too sure on the mobo chip sets and video card choice. Thoughts on this?
TIA
She is filming projects with her DV cam and then editing it. She has Pinnacle but she has an older (1.33) AMD machine. So I want to build (or buy) a P4 system for her.Originally posted by: sm8000
Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
Going to build a basic machine for my daughter, nothing too fancy. I was thinking along the lines of a P4, 2.8, intel board, 1 GB RAM, 9600XT, DVD burner and a WD120JB.
I am not too sure on the mobo chip sets and video card choice. Thoughts on this?
TIA
Somehow I have the feeling that people are suggesting a machine that is really overkill for your daughter's needs. What do you mean by basic video editing - is she recording TV shows, making DVDs, saving video files from her webcam....????
Originally posted by: Rahabib...Oh and dont skimp on the drives or RAM only 7200+ drives and SATA is even better...