Comments

Norbert wrote on 7/19/2018, 10:49 AM

Same issue here, I have a Ryzen 1700x and a GTX 1080 and Vegas uses around 30% of my CPU and 4-5% GPU while rendering...

OldSmoke wrote on 7/19/2018, 1:00 PM

It really depends in the encoder used for rendering. If the codec is not optimized for NVENC or VCE then there isn't much to gain. Also keep in mind that Vegas still relies on OpenCL for FX processing and that just works better with AMD cards.

Proud owner of Sony Vegas Pro 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 & 13 and now Magix VP15&16.

System Spec.:
Motherboard: ASUS X299 Prime-A

Ram: G.Skill 4x8GB DDR4 2666 XMP

CPU: i7-9800x @ 4.6GHz (custom water cooling system)
GPU: 1x AMD Vega Pro Frontier Edition (water cooled)
Hard drives: System Samsung 970Pro NVME, AV-Projects 1TB (4x Intel P7600 512GB VROC), 4x 2.5" Hotswap bays, 1x 3.5" Hotswap Bay, 1x LG BluRay Burner

PSU: Corsair 1200W
Monitor: 2x Dell Ultrasharp U2713HM (2560x1440)

dream wrote on 7/20/2018, 1:59 AM

update i restart project it gives quite good - cpu 60% gpu -30%

@Norbertman 4-5% is disappointing,

@OldSmokei use magix avc acc mp4 ,with NVEnc

Norbert wrote on 7/20/2018, 5:13 AM

I have X AVC L and X AVC I files, only Levels and Sharpen are applied on track level and it renders with 40% CPU and 5-12% GPU. I hope they are going to do something with the hardware acceleration. Maybe the problem is that I use Sony AVC/MVC codec, but until there is a color band issue with the MAGIX AVC HD it isn't usable. Even if I render it into MAGIX AVC HD using NVEC isn't very faster... Premiere renders into h.264 way faster using even more vfx and color corrections with the same type of source files.

 

Norbert wrote on 7/20/2018, 5:16 AM

I borrowed some more RAM for a fwe days and even with 32 GB it rendered slow.