I render with my RTX 4090 24GB at twice the speed of my GTX 1060 6GB

John_Waves wrote on 11/4/2022, 2:57 PM

Hello! Is this normal?

I render with my RTX 4090 24GB at twice the speed of my GTX 1060 6GB

Same rendering settings 1080p, 30fps, and BPS 50,000 with MAGIX AVC/AAC MP4 Codec

I thought there would be more difference when rendering ¿?

Maybe I need to wait for a new Vegas update?  I just bought the Pro 20 version

 

Thank You

 

Comments

andyrpsmith wrote on 11/4/2022, 6:53 PM

Here is a comparison of the cards Video encoders:

https://developer.nvidia.com/video-encode-and-decode-gpu-support-matrix-new

Vegas just uses the onboard GPU encoder which may only be twice as fast on the 4090 than the 1060

RogerS wrote on 11/4/2022, 10:29 PM

That seems pretty reasonable for a speed increase- I'd be happy with it. The difference in encoders is minimal from generation to generation and while the 3D calculation ability of the 40XX is much greater than 10XX, that may not be the bottleneck with your project anyway (GPU may be waiting on the CPU for something).

Also try a standardized benchmark project and let's see how your results compare. I suggest trying UHD and HD MagixAVC with NVENC renders to start with. https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1Exbi4K3hbxw6snJuisR1ble-0tCPVNcIcNnx0BAtSIM/

RogerS wrote on 11/4/2022, 11:57 PM

Update: I see a new benchmark result with the 4090 that came in as the fastest UHD (4K) NVENC system to date and only a second off the best QSV and VCE renders. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1b3ggVifKsuT-cp2kQHjum_KnQ4-2jBmUIvzmu7BQZ34/edit?usp=sharing

bitman wrote on 11/5/2022, 3:52 AM

Dual NVENC encoders are included on Ada GeForce RTX 40 Series GPUs with at least 12 GB of memory...

Thats not to say Vegas pro will use the two encoders in one session (yet).

Thing is, maybe you can run 2 concurrent Vegas pro sessions rendering out two videos at the same time...

If I am not mistaken decoding (NVDEC), has the same chip (single) as in the 3xxx series.

Quote from Guru3d:

DaVinci Resolve by Blackmagic Design, the Voukoder plugin for Adobe Premiere Pro, and Jianying, the leading video editing tool in China, all enable AV1 compatibility and a dual encoder via encode presets. In October, dual encoder and AV1 compatibility will be available for these applications. NVIDIA is also collaborating with the popular video effects application Notch to enable AV1 and with Topaz to offer support for AV1 and dual encoders.

Last changed by bitman on 11/5/2022, 3:53 AM, changed a total of 1 times.

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Former user wrote on 11/5/2022, 7:41 PM

Dual NVENC encoders are included on Ada GeForce RTX 40 Series GPUs with at least 12 GB of memory...

Thats not to say Vegas pro will use the two encoders in one session (yet).

@bitman

Dual Nvenc is for HEVC and AV1, H.264 reportedly is identical on the 4000 series in comparison to 2000 and 3000 series. If true this would mean any speed up in encodes for H.264 is unrelated to it's H.264 hardware encoder, it's in the processing.

This assumes H.264 encoder is actually identical to previous encoders, and it's not reviewers assuming it's the same because it wasn't upgraded to the dual NVENC encoding of H.265 and AV1