I have been getting more and more interested in video editing, and with the black Friday specials I noticed that SSDs (solid state hard drives) are marked down up to 50% off which got me to thinking maybe updating my 8 year old Phenom II 955 with 8 gb and a 80 gb intel ssd would be a good idea.
For those of you who don't know a SSD will make your tired old PC better than new and boot up in around 30 seconds or less and launch programs instantly.
Here is what I learned so far.
1. SSD RAIDs top on at 4 disk for consumer grade
2. Standard video editing uses the cpu for editing
3. GPU is mostly for running after effects
4. 32 GB is a good starting point for ram.
5. Multiple core CPUs are best. Premiere can use all the cores.
6. Having a SSD array is key.
7. A better worklow may might be possible by having 2 or more computers 1 for editing and others for rendering. Export/Rendering is time consuming.
I would be interested to hear from members who do this for a hobby or living. Thanks again for the recommendations on the phone.
Sources:
Intel 4k video editing guide
http://www.intel.com/content/dam/www/public/us/en/documents/guides/workstation-adobe-4k-guide.pdfKingston Raid SSD RAID Arrays
http://www.kingston.com/us/community/articledetail/articleid/8?Article-Title=Accelerating-System-Performance-with-SSD-RAID-ArraysGeneral discussion about video editing.
http://forums.macrumors.com/threads/how-much-does-ram-matter-with-video-editing.1562388/Edit: Read this guide if you are planning on building a video editing system.http://ppbm7.com/index.php/new-system-buildFor a novice $1,500 is a good starting point for a budget system i7-4790k, 32 gb ram, SSD raid 0, and a GTX 980.
If you want to make money at it you need a 6 core i7-5930k system which adds an extra $1,000 to the cost. What makes the i7-5930 a good choice is the 15mb of cache vs 8 on the 4790k, and the it has 40 PCIe lances vs 28 lanes on the 4790k.
Think of PCIe lanes like lanes on the highway, and 16 of those lanes are taken up by the GTX980 which only leaves 12 lanes on the 4790k while the 5930 has 24 free lanes. Those lanes can be used for a super fast m.2 hard drive that has a 2 GBs transfer. It is a huge difference.
I am going with an i7-4790k as that is the max I am willing to spend at this time. If I really like the video editing stuff I will bump it up to an 8 core setup.