This small program would check things on the system like. This would be under preferences, or Help > Compatability. I have requested over the years that Vegas should have a compatibility test tab. SECONDARY COMPUTER (often used as rendering maching)ĭrive (for storage): Westen Digital Black 6 TB (likely an "old" one)ĭrive (for performance): Samsung 850 Pro 512 GBĮxtra drives (for archives) : 4x SATA "cold" swipe slot Ignite Pro (full plug-in suite), NeatVideo 10 years old)Įxtra soundcard (usually off): M-Audio Air 192|14Ĭurrent version of Vegas Pro : 19.0 (Build 458) Third monitor: Old Sony TV (Full HD) (approx. Secondary monitor: BenQ (UHD 4K) monitor that was supposed to have accurate colours, but after they replaced it twice, it looks like a different series and colours aren't that good. Monitor used as colour reference: Asus ProArt PA329 (UHD 4K) GPU: Nvidia Geforce GTX 1080 Ti - Drivers on : "Studio Drivers" 30., ĭrive (for OS) : Samsung 980 Pro nVME 2 TBĭrives (for performance) : Samsung 980 Pro nVME 2 TB + Samsung 970 Pro nVME 1 TBĭrive (for storage) : Western Digital Gold 12 TBĮxtra drives (for archives) : 4x SATA "cold" swipe slots should I forget about GPU acceleration Should I worry about my current GPU? Am I missing some setting? Using some GPU rendering with some plug-in and some sequence arrangement may result in "digital noise" rendering. encoding a video with GPU, and at the same time editing another video in Vegas, using Lightroom, or even playing some graphically average "management-type" video game may result in black frames all along the rendered video using HitFilm plug-ins such as "Auto Lens Flare" and "Auto Volumetrics" misses plenty of effects rending with GPU, compared to previewing with or without GPU, and to rendering with CPU. I was so happy when Vegas re-gained GPU acceleration (at least regarding my computer's Nvidia GTX 980) with version 15.īut now I realised GPU encoding result is not necessarily constant:
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