Configure Your System

The two most popular questions I get every day in my email concern media management and system configuration. In this article I want to tackle system configuration.

These thoughts apply to all video and audio editing systems on both Mac and PCs.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

If there’s one really important piece of advice I can share its this: Don’t obsess over configuring the “best system.” Look for a system that meets your needs and budget.

Technology changes daily. Whatever you buy today will be out of date next week and no longer sold next year. The absolute best system today won’t be worth anything in four years; and six years from now we’ll wonder how we could get any productive work done with it.

We need to change the question from: “What’s the best?” to “What do I need to meet my needs?”

SYSTEM CATEGORIES

We need to pick our hardware depending upon three broad categories of editing:

Clearly, it would be great to configure a system that handles everything all the time in real-time with no problems. However, most of us don’t have that kind of money lying around.

Again, we need to change the discussion from “I want it to do everything,” to “I need a system that handles my current editing with room to grow in the future.” This means that we need to take a hard look at the kind of editing we are doing and what we plan to do for the future.

SIDE NOTE: STANDARD DEFINITION VIDEO (SD)

If all you or your clients need to edit is SD video, any computer and virtually any hard disk will be fine. (For most editing, USB 2 is too slow to be reliable. However, it will be fast enough to edit simple DV video on Windows. I recommend FireWire 800 for DV editing on the Mac.)

All DVDs always-and-only display standard def video. As long as you have a DVD burner, you don’t need a really fast computer. Yes, video compression will benefit from faster computers. However, if all you are doing is compressing for DVDs, you won’t see speed gains significant to justify the cost of buying a high-speed computer solely for DVD video compression.

IMAGE SIZE, FRAME RATE, AND VIDEO CODEC

Any currently shipping computer can edit HD video with few problems. Most medium- to high-end computers can edit 2K or 4K images, again, with few problems. The computer is no longer the key device it used to be. The issue with larger frame sizes is not the speed of your computer, but the speed and capacity of your storage.

For most single-stream, HD video editing, a single hard drive attached via Thunderbolt, USB 3, or FireWire 800 will be sufficient. (I do not recommend editing HD video using USB 2 or FireWire 400 devices.)

Here are a few typical codecs and data rates:

Keep in mind that data rates double for unrendered footage when dissolving or wiping between two video clips for the duration of the transition.

A single spinning media hard drive transfers data around 120 MB/second (85 MB/second for FireWire 800). This speed is more than adequate for standard HD editing.

SIDE NOTE: CAN I USE SSD DRIVES

SSD drives are blindingly fast. Speeds 4 – 5 times faster than standard spinning media are typical from a variety of vendors. However, there are two big downsides to SSD drives. They:

If money is no object, SSD drives make a huge difference in performance. However, if you need the maximum amount of storage without breaking the bank, the best use of SSD drives is to use them as your boot drive. This provides screaming performance for the operating system, applications and all background processes. Then, use standard hard drives and RAIDs for media storage on external devices.

NOTE: I do not recommend storing media on your boot drive. It is too small if you are using an internal SSD drive and too slow if you are using a standard hard disk. All media should be stored on a hard drive other than the boot drive. In most cases, this means an external device.

AS FRAME SIZES GROW

As frame sizes grow, you need to graduate from a single hard drive to a RAID. This is a collection of hard drives that act as a single, very big, very fast hard drive. (Here’s an article that explains RAIDs in more detail.)

“But wait a minute!” (I hear you say.) “I have a Thunderbolt hard drive, isn’t that fast enough?”

No.

Whether you connect a singe spinning hard drive via Thunderbolt 1, Thunderbolt 2, USB 3.1, USB 3, or, to a more restricted extent, FireWire 800, the speed of the hard drive is NOT based on the protocol (how it’s connected), but the speed of the drive itself.

Within a few percent, the fastest a single hard drive can go, without flash (SSD) acceleration, is around 120 MB/second. (FireWire 800 maxes out around 85 MB/second.) This means that the only way storage gets faster is to gang drives together; which is what a RAID is all about.

As a rule of thumb, as frame size doubles (720p to 2K, from 2K to 4K) data rates quadruple (um, go up four times!). This means that as you start editing high-resolution images, you will very quickly exceed the speed of a single hard drive. VERY quickly!

HOW BIG A RAID?

The rule of thumb that I use to approximate RAID data transfer rates is to multiple the number of drives in a RAID by 100 to determine its data transfer rate.

This means that a 4-drive RAID will deliver data to or from your computer around 400 MB/second.  (Yes, this varies by RAID configuration (RAID 0 vs. RAID 5), whether it uses flash to accelerate transfers, and other technical factors. However, as a rough guide, this is pretty good.)

This also means that if you take a 4-drive RAID and connect it via Thunderbolt 2, it won’t transfer data at even Thunderbolt 1 speeds. In other words, the protocol is way faster than the drives you are using.

UM, HOW ABOUT SSDs AGAIN?

Yup. Using an all-SSD system will make things really fast, but, again, you are trading off total storage. For me, I’d rather add more spinning disks to gain speed, than switch to SSD (which is really fast) and spend a lot more money to get the storage I need.

NOTE: If you need speed more than storage space, an all-SSD RAID is blazing fast. Not cheap, but really, really fast.

I’M EDITING AUDIO, WHAT ABOUT A JBOD INSTEAD OF A RAID?

A JBOD (“Just A Bunch of Drives”) looks like a RAID, but each drive can be accessed independently. Recently, in another article I wrote about RAIDs, a sound engineer reported that they recommended using JBODs for audio editing and effects, rather than a RAID, because the performance was better.

So I checked with a couple of RAID vendors that also make JBOD devices, as well as some professional sound effects engineers.

They all agreed that, in general, RAIDs deliver faster performance than a JBOD for most audio editing. This is a subject I will explore further in additional articles.

WHERE DOES BIT-DEPTH FIT IN?

Bit-depth determines how accurately our digital images represent reality. The higher the bit-depth, the more accurately the color (and gray-scale) values reproduce what our eyes can see. However, there’s a trade-off: The higher the bit depth, the bigger the file.

For example:

Bit-Depth Color / Gray-scale Values File Growth
8 256 1x
10 1,024 4x
12 4,096 16x
14 16,384 65x
16 65,536 256x

Whew! Without compression, these files can become gigantic! This is another reason for the adage: “You’ll spend far more for storage than you’ll ever spend for your computer.”

CHANGING CODECS

The one place where faster computers will make a difference is in dealing with some of the newer codecs.

H.264 is notorious for being difficult to decompress in real-time. G-5 computers, for example, could not even play H.264 files reliably. Canon has some codecs in their DSLR cameras that require really fast gear.

If you are working with older cameras, you can also use older computers. However, don’t assume that all modern codecs will play reliably on older gear. Sometimes the processor just isn’t fast enough.

This is a good place to point out that testing a video format for compatibility and performance on your editing gear before shooting that major motion picture can save a ton of heart-ache in the editing suite after the fact.

NOTE: Keep in mind that for short-term projects that are outside the capability of your normal setup, computer gear and editing systems can be easily rented and shipped anywhere. That is often a more cost-effective choice than buying all new gear.

SINGLE VS. MULTI-CAMERA EDITING

Just as storage becomes the gating factor as image size or bit-depth increase, so also storage speed (data transfer rate) becomes the gating factor as you start to edit multicam sequences. Again, even an iMac can easily edit a 12-stream multicam sequence; it isn’t the computer, its the speed of your storage.

Each stream in a multicam stream is a full video stream. For example, when editing ProRes 422 at 1080p 50 or 60:

Even a two stream edit is going to tax a single hard drive because the heads can’t switch between the two streams fast enough for reliable playback.

As you start to do more multicam editing, you’ll need a high-speed RAID connected via Thunderbolt.

HEY, HOW ABOUT AN SSD RAID?

Yes, for multicam work, an SSD RAID will be a big improvement over spinning media. You won’t be able to store as much on it, but your multicam editing will fly.

Another good technique is to convert your multicam source files to proxy files for the purposes of multicam editing, then switch back to full-res when the multicam is done.

WHAT HAPPENS IF I DO LOTS OF EFFECTS

When it comes to effects, the rules change. Storage is no longer important, graphics process is. Both Final Cut and Premiere are off-loading more and more processing to the GPU (Graphics Processing Unit). This means that if effects are your bread-and-butter, for example editing commercials or motion graphics, you don’t need massive storage, you need massive GPUs.

The trend in today’s video editing software is to push as much of the image processing to the GPU as possible. The more effects work you do, the more you will benefit from a high-speed GPU. From what I’ve been told by both Adobe and Apple, the difference between OpenCL and CUDA has, essentially, disappeared. Both will do an excellent job in graphics processing.

NOTE: Before buying a GPU, however, make sure it is compatible with your software – not all GPU cards are.

WHERE DO I SPEND MY MONEY?

Here is my recommendation on where to spend money. Not all systems can be customized, so look at the specs of each unit and pick the one that comes closest to what you need:

For the budget-limited:

For straight editing

For multicam editing

For effects-heavy editing

IF I CAN’T GET THUNDERBOLT, HOW ABOUT USB 3.1?

First, your computer needs to support USB 3 or 3.1. Plugging a USB 3 device into a USB 2 port only slows the USB 3 device down to USB 2 speeds.

USB 3.1, the latest version of USB, is the fastest version of USB yet, but it isn’t as fast as Thunderbolt. Also, the USB protocol is designed for moving small packets of data, while Thunderbolt is designed for moving massive media files.

If you are on a PC and don’t have access to Thunderbolt, then mini-SAS, USB 3, USB 3.1, or FibreChannel are all excellent options with serious speed. eSATA isn’t necessarily as fast, but it will also be a good, economical choice when editing fewer streams of multicam video. Given the choice, eSATA is a better choice than any version of FireWire.

WHEN SHOULD I CONSIDER THUNDERBOLT 2?

The only way the data transfer rate of your storage is going to fill a Thunderbolt 2 pipe is using a RAID with 20 spinning hard disks, or ten SSD drives. Anything less won’t do it.

Thunderbolt 2 is designed, for now, to drive 4K video monitors, not storage bandwidth. Storage vendors are supporting Thunderbolt 2 not because they need to – they don’t – but because they don’t want to be at a marketing disadvantage when they are shipping Thunderbolt 1 and the competition is shipping Thunderbolt 2.

For virtually all editing today – except stereoscopic 3D, high-bit depth, multicam editing – an 8-drive RAID will be more than enough. And, in fact, for most of us, a 4-drive RAID will be sufficient.

NOTE: Another reason storage vendors are supporting Thunderbolt 2, is that when you connect a Thunderbolt 1 device as part of a chain of Thunderbolt 2 devices, the entire chain slows down to Thunderbolt 1 speeds. While probably not affecting your storage at all, this would have a serious impact on any external video monitors you are using.

SUMMARY

As you’ve discovered, the computer isn’t the focus of configuring a system. The challenges are storage, GPUs and understanding the kind of editing you are doing.

There is no one perfect editing system, because each of us is doing different kinds of editing. My goal in this article is to help you ask the right questions as you plan your next system.

Don’t get caught in the “What’s the Best?” trap. Think about your needs and find the gear that meets them on a budget you can afford.

As always, I’m interested in your comments.


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6 Responses to Configure Your System

  1. Karsten Schluter says:

    Hi Larry,
    excellent – as usual – overview, what to do when, thank you!
    But let me add some recommendation to the very, I mean very low end, I’ve read almost nothing about it so far: software-raids, built-in feature in MacOS, nobody cares. I’m a hobbyist, so (render)speed nor reliability (Raid0!!) are not top priority, but wallet size … shared my experiences at http://www.fcp.co/forum/2-off-topic/20516-4k-multicam-with-a-macmini-why-not

    OK, more of a crazy stunt, I do NOT edit 4k-multicams every day 😉 but a <100€-Raid delivers well 3-5 sources HD Multicam-edits (sport games) on my no-budget system. In my article, there's another, silly sounding advice: switch-Off the MultiCam Preview increases overall performance enormously! (ok, video-editing blind-folded is a bit … special)

    … which completely shares your advice, "each stream a platter" (me no engineer, just my personal rule of thumb) ….

    greetings from Munich/Germany

  2. James Duke says:

    Hi Larry,

    I probably missed it, but at some point before new Mac Pro release you talked about its capabilities etc. Have you purchased one? What was its configuration?

    Thanks.

    James

  3. Ricky V says:

    Larry, thank you for sharing this insight. For far too long I was clamoring to find the best system and always felt like something was amiss. Now, I know what that is. Being that I only edit for Youtube and 1080P at the most a basic yet modern computer will serve my needs. Your blog has always been an amazing resource of information and assistance. Please keep writing and thank you again.

  4. stu aull says:

    Great, concise advice as always Larry. Thanks for taking the time to lay it all out. Again.

  5. Something that has worked very well for me – I upgraded my internal hard drive to a Hybrid SSD/Standard (spinning) drive. You get some of the speed of SSD with the lower cost and greater storage capacity of a standard spinning drive. I am thoroughly pleased – the speed of everything on my computer improved drastically.

    This is the one I bought:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00B99JU5M/ref=oh_details_o00_s00_i00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

    I noticed tremendous speed increases, even though the spinning part is only 5400 rpm.

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