Ergo Zjeci Posted November 27, 2013 Share Posted November 27, 2013 Hello, Please can you be so kind people and share your computer specs/configs, so i can decide what should i go for, i am about to buy Canon 5D mk3 and use ML RAW. ( i do not want to go war between PCs vs MACs or Hackintosh ) Why i am asking this? Well this great community (tnx to Andrew) is dealing with most complex cameras and RAW files that comes out from the cameras and for post (computer) that means heavy load on HDDs and CPUs and GPU. What is your config? I am leaning more to PC with budget around 1000 -1500 Eur so i have 2 configurations in cue. Option 1 CPU:Intel Core i7 4770 BOX procesor, Haswell MOBO:ASUS Z87-PLUS, DDR3, SATA3, USB3, mini DP, LGA1150 ATX RAM DDR3 16GB Kit (2x 8) PC3-12800 1600MHz CL9 Crucial Ballistix Sport GPU:ASUS GFX R9 270X, 2GB GDDR5, PCI-E 3.0 SCRATCH: WD HDD 1TB 7200RPM 64MB 6GB/S BLUE LG GH24NSB0 DVD-RW zapisovalnik, SATA, crn CASE: Antec Three Hundred EU POWER:Power Supply Silentpower LC6650GP3-650W V2.3 Price: 1000 EUR Option 2 CPU Intel i7-4770K CPU Cooler: Corsair Hydro H100i MOBO: Gigabyte Z87X-D3H 1150 Socket GPU: Nvidia 7702GB EVGA ACX PSU: Corsair HX750 750W CASE: Fractal Design Define R4 Boot Drive: Corsair Force GS F240 240Gb SSD SCRATCH: Seagate 1TB 64MB CACHE SATA III RAM : Corsair Vengance 8Gb 1600Mhz Mouse : Roccat Kova FANS: Corsair AF (Airflow) 140mm Fans Price 1500Eur 2 x Monitor LED 24" Dell UltraSharp U2412M Price: 2 x 250 EUR Programs to be used: Premiere, AE, SG, Davinci Resolve etc .. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jpfilmz Posted November 28, 2013 Share Posted November 28, 2013 iMac 27 inch Late 2009 model Processor: 2.8 GHz i7 Memory: 32 GB Ram 1333 DDR3 Graphics: ATI Radeon HD 4850 512 MB I cannot run Resolve on it but I have a newer Macbook Pro laptop that can...but I prefer to work in After Effects for now. It doesn't take me long to convert using RAWmagic and importing into After Effects to grade is not a problem either. I export in Proress in After Effects and edit in Premiere. Pretty simple really and not that big of a hassle. I will say that working in Resolve Lite is nice because you can bring in all the clips....apply a LUT and send them all to the render queue. If Resolve is important I'd make sure you have a compatible graphics card and a good amount of ram. Ergo Zjeci 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chrisso Posted November 28, 2013 Share Posted November 28, 2013 iMac 27" 3.4ghz - 2012 Edits raw and runs Resolve Ergo Zjeci 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
see ya Posted November 28, 2013 Share Posted November 28, 2013 I'd double your GPU ram to 4GB. Have you looked at socket 2011 ivy bridge e? Consider one decent monitor that takes a 3D LUT than two poor ones and just pick up a cheap monitor for GUI. Then there's the whole SDI out not GPU, external LUT box etc. Ergo Zjeci 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jcs Posted November 28, 2013 Share Posted November 28, 2013 2010 MacPro 2.93GHz 12-core 24GB RAM GT120 and Quadro 5000, Mercury SSDs, 7200 RPM drives- 5TB (+ external SATA cage 5TB, SATA 4 port drive cartridge system (stick bare drives in it for archival copying and storage offline)). Running in Win7 most of the time- faster, more stable (also boot into OSX). Runs Resolve well, PPro, AE etc. (CS6 and CC). Ergo Zjeci 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ergo Zjeci Posted November 28, 2013 Author Share Posted November 28, 2013 I'd double your GPU ram to 4GB. Have you looked at socket 2011 ivy bridge e? Consider one decent monitor that takes a 3D LUT than two poor ones and just pick up a cheap monitor for GUI. Then there's the whole SDI out not GPU, external LUT box etc. can you be more specific on what GPU is that and how to tell my computer shop to this setup? do you know the price for that setup? Is the 3D lut for 3D? sorry for my noobnes and thank you for your help Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ergo Zjeci Posted November 28, 2013 Author Share Posted November 28, 2013 2010 MacPro 2.93GHz 12-core 24GB RAM GT120 and Quadro 5000, Mercury SSDs, 7200 RPM drives- 5TB (+ external SATA cage 5TB, SATA 4 port drive cartridge system (stick bare drives in it for archival copying and storage offline)). Running in Win7 most of the time- faster, more stable (also boot into OSX). Runs Resolve well, PPro, AE etc. (CS6 and CC). a lot of Power .. i can see here even if its 2010 model!! i think this setup runs very smooth and i guess u put some money on it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ergo Zjeci Posted November 28, 2013 Author Share Posted November 28, 2013 iMac 27" 3.4ghz - 2012 Edits raw and runs Resolve That should cost like 2000$ ? and i read iMac have very nice balanced montior Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ergo Zjeci Posted November 28, 2013 Author Share Posted November 28, 2013 iMac 27 inch Late 2009 model Processor: 2.8 GHz i7 Memory: 32 GB Ram 1333 DDR3 Graphics: ATI Radeon HD 4850 512 MB I cannot run Resolve on it but I have a newer Macbook Pro laptop that can...but I prefer to work in After Effects for now. It doesn't take me long to convert using RAWmagic and importing into After Effects to grade is not a problem either. I export in Proress in After Effects and edit in Premiere. Pretty simple really and not that big of a hassle. I will say that working in Resolve Lite is nice because you can bring in all the clips....apply a LUT and send them all to the render queue. If Resolve is important I'd make sure you have a compatible graphics card and a good amount of ram. I was asking my Apple dealer shop for new Retina 15 (the one with pro GPU) i can get it for like 2.660 euro Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chrisso Posted November 28, 2013 Share Posted November 28, 2013 The iMac monitor is brighter and more punchy than a proper grading monitor. I use a second, flatter monitor with it. I think you can probably use the current top level iMac with a fully upgraded graphics card, or one of the more powerful Macbook Pros with retina. gloopglop and Ergo Zjeci 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
see ya Posted November 29, 2013 Share Posted November 29, 2013 can you be more specific on what GPU is that and how to tell my computer shop to this setup? do you know the price for that setup? Is the 3D lut for 3D? sorry for my noobnes and thank you for your help NVidia GTX770 4GB any make, budget would be maybe a Zotac. Socket 2011 could be a Asus P9X79 Pro mobo which gives 2x 16x PCI-e 3.0, on a budget a basic quad core processor, 16GB or 32GB HyperX (4x 8GB sticks). Eizo CS series monitor + cheapo monitor for GUI / Scopes. The SDI thing and 3D LUT box is a step too far really for budget. Most important is GPU power with as much VRAM as you can afford 4GB really particularly if using any temporal filters, then 2nd importance is RAM, 16GB minimum, 32GB better, then least importance is processor, just used for encoding. Personally I'd not waste cash on an 8 core or greater processor, on a SSD, on 2x mediocre Dell monitors, perhaps put that cash towards one decent entry level reference monitor like a Eizo CS range, or the CX range that'll take a 3D LUT, if you can afford it. Ergo Zjeci 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gloopglop Posted November 29, 2013 Share Posted November 29, 2013 The iMac monitor is brighter and more punchy than a proper grading monitor. I use a second, flatter monitor with it. id love to hear more about this im going to be getting a new 27" imac and i assumed id need a second monitor for color (not to mention convenience) recommendations welcome :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chrisso Posted November 29, 2013 Share Posted November 29, 2013 Eizo CS or CX as mentioned above. Images look 'eye candy' on the iMac screen, but flatter and darker on my Eizo. You want a true representation for correct grading. gloopglop and Ergo Zjeci 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gloopglop Posted November 29, 2013 Share Posted November 29, 2013 Eizo CS or CX as mentioned above. Images look 'eye candy' on the iMac screen, but flatter and darker on my Eizo. You want a true representation for correct grading. thanks a lot chrisso ill check them out ive just barely started getting into what my options are for [FRUGAL but effective] cc monitiors ::sigh:: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ergo Zjeci Posted November 30, 2013 Author Share Posted November 30, 2013 NVidia GTX770 4GB any make, budget would be maybe a Zotac. Socket 2011 could be a Asus P9X79 Pro mobo which gives 2x 16x PCI-e 3.0, on a budget a basic quad core processor, 16GB or 32GB HyperX (4x 8GB sticks). Eizo CS series monitor + cheapo monitor for GUI / Scopes. The SDI thing and 3D LUT box is a step too far really for budget. Most important is GPU power with as much VRAM as you can afford 4GB really particularly if using any temporal filters, then 2nd importance is RAM, 16GB minimum, 32GB better, then least importance is processor, just used for encoding. Personally I'd not waste cash on an 8 core or greater processor, on a SSD, on 2x mediocre Dell monitors, perhaps put that cash towards one decent entry level reference monitor like a Eizo CS range, or the CX range that'll take a 3D LUT, if you can afford it. Eizo are pretty expensive for my range, and for ssd --> i am sure that i need one for scratch at least ... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
see ya Posted December 1, 2013 Share Posted December 1, 2013 Yeah your right, but a reasonable grading monitor will be more expensive than a computer monitor, spending 500 euros on two mediocre Dells id over half towards a CX, which also appear to be on offer at the moment. But yes a budget to work to is inevitable. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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