You can tell he doesn't know anything about hardware ...he's basically clueless...he's reading of from either papers or a result instead doing his own analysis which he doesn't do. ....so sad.....
Having 16GBytes of Video Ram certainly helps with scrubbing/editing my 6K footage. A fast NVMe PCIe drive as a cache/temp/scratch disk is a great help. An ordinary SSD for "C: + Apps" is fast enough, as your OS does not necessarily run faster on a NVMe. More RAM does help.
I am debating between a 4tb Sabrent Rocket 3.0 M.2 or a 4TB Seagate FireCuda 530 4TB 4.0 m.2 for my project drive/Dropbox Drive. (I am avoiding the Rocket 4 plus because of its lower endurance ratings). I have a 5950x., 64gb ram, and edit 4k UA-cam vids with B-Roll. In the video, he mentioned noticing slightly faster timeline responsiveness with the pci 4.0 m.2. I wonder if he would have seen this same result if he had a separate scratch disk. Could this advantage over the 3.0 be nullified by my using a fast pci 4.0 m.2 as a scratch disk? Puget systems recommends using a moderately fast SSD for the project disk (saying that a faster won't really make a difference) and a super fast SSD for the scratch disk. I am wondering if the 4.0 is worth the extra $250, or if it will give pretty much the exact same feel as the 3.0 (when using a fast scratch disk). Any thoughts? Thanks!
I've also noticed that when it comes to video editing. Havine RAM that is specificly stated as "supported" on the MOBO can make a big difference. I had 64gb 4000Mhz RAM which my Asus Dark Hero MOBO says it can support up to and beyond that amount. BUT, my ram was not "Specifically" mentioned in its supported ram. Which would cause Davinci Resovle to lock up after a few minutes. After getting 32gb 3600Mhz that is mentioned in the manual. I haven't had an issue. My issue was like having a friend that you got along with playing games, but try working on a project with them and they instantly through a fit.
1 year later im using ur code for the windows keys and it even stacked w their current sale! so happy i found ur channel lately. its been so informative for an editor like myself who edits on his own built system.
Too much efford, thanks for all of that bro. Whenever i try to learn something about creator pc performances you just pop-up! You work so hard for all of us. Very appreciate you are here
Regarding Nvme drives' read/write speeds, I seem to recall reading a footnote, which basically states capacity affects its performance. In other words, as the drive fills up, speed decreases. Something to explore on another test of yours, perhaps? Great video. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you so much for this. I'm building a new editing station now but I was really having a hard time deciding on which drives to purchase since I didn't know how they would affect my timeline and rendering. This is also going to affect my motherboard choice with my budget constraints. Thank you so so much!
Hi Tech Notice, I do have: 1To SSD (with Win10 and everything on it) 2To SATA HDD (Not very used.) Q1-What is your suggestion to make my work with Davinci Resolve more efficient with only theses 2 storage? Q2-My budget is limited, how big of a boost in performance will I get if I buy another SSD? Specifications is one thing, but real life is THE thing! Thanks a lot for ALL your amazing techy video. I always thumbs up your video to show you the respect you deserve.
I really enjoy watching your videos. They are very technical and demonstrate professionalism. I would like to see a test like this at Davinci Resolve. Thanks
the best review video of all the ssd and hhd comparison on youtube so far in regards to/for premiere pro. Really appreciate your Hardwork bro, Keep going on... thank you so much.
Great video, thanks! I was wondering about it too and researched a lot, but you explain it so well and it’s way more fun to watch ;) Greetings from Berlin
The timeline contains mixed clips which is basically different gradient of load on drive which makes a bit off test but is actually real usecase. HDD to any SSD even to SATA is very huge difference. But, there seem to be not much difference on SATA to NVMe ones. All that matters is random speeds and response time. Though NVMe drives have good sequential speed, random speed are same but response time is faster than SATA ones. So, that could only make a little difference on SSD side.
another brillant vlog my head is bursting with information i have started saveing all the vlogs for reference best tech info site clear to understand and like working with a friend
Comparison side by side in every aspect possible is what we need. And the way he delivers saved us huge amount of time trying to figure out but don't have enough equipment and interested to do
3:16 - BTW Intel 11th gen CPUs and motherboards are already out, since 30th of March, you can at least buy those here where I live. Those have PCIe 4.0 and several Z590 chipset boards have 3 M.2 slots. Nice video once again!
Testing a NAS with proper RAID setup and 10Gbit connection (for video editing) could also be interesting to see in the near future! Especially if using SSD drives, not HDDs. Expensive, but not many channels have done videos about that :)
I might be a bit late to the party but is there any way for you to set up a blind test for yourself when it comes to "feeling" the difference between drives? Maybe you have a partner who can open up each project and then you get to say which drive feels faster/snappier/smoother?
That is a genius idea! Blind tests are the true tellers; no heart feels, it's only what the user perceives. I do them with audio set ups when I upgrade a component, and there are times where I surprise myself!
thx for the comparison, I'm actually looking to find a good price/performance nvme for photo editing and exporting animation videos based on OpenGL. And, also the best nvme for using and loading VSTs in Cubase. For now, PCI 3.0 seems the best deal. take care!
Grabbed myself a Samsung 980 1tb (gen 3 drive) for £80 to put in my new build. It's currently available at that price on ccl computers for anyone looking to purchase one
To distill all I've learned: HDD for storage only. Forget PCIE3.0. Choose between SATA SSD and PCIE4.0. If you can afford the latter, get it. If you can't SATA SSD is the next best value for money. PCIE3.0 for most applications isn't a good enough improvement on SATA SSD to warrant the price hike.
This is the Best Comparison Video Ever! i am using normal hdd and i was guessing maybe my graphics card is not enough because i have i9 processor and my premier playback sucks so bad!! i guess now i know i have to use nvme ssds only while editing. normal hdds sucks.
Actually, I would have expected you to include one of the Optane P 1600x series. Their 4k write times are still unmatched by PCIe 4.0 and 5.0. Would have been interesting to see them compare to those NAND-drives in workload scenarios.
Nice video as always 👍 Could you make a vodeo about how you work with your black and white PC? You build in a 3.0 and a 4.0 storage drive, so it would be interesting to know what you store where. Thanks a lot!
Thanks a lot man, editing with my hdd is a pain in the ass, i dont really like editing more because its too slow but tomorrow ill buy a ssd i hope my passion to edit returns when i get the ssd m2 thanks a lot man, you are the only one who has this video thanks a lot:)))
To be fair, I'd never use a green drive for work data just archive. My current 12TB WD work drives have a read/write in the 250MB/sec range (2.5x faster than your green) but about to upgrade to 8TB 7.4/5.5GB/s in the mac studio.
Question, when you compare the hdd vs ssd vs m2 etc. Does that also mean the footage HAS to be on that drive to use its power? Like if my footage is on an hdd but adobe on an ssd, will it mean i get hdd playback?
Such a great video my friend!! I highly recommend to make a video about RAM in terms of creating different video qualities in Premier Pro, just don't include gaming since many yt channels did that. do we need 16gb, 32gb, 64gb? Such as rending 4k vids is enough to benchmark, so it wont consume much time for testing. And does it affect if we use 4 rams than 2 pairs of ram? Like 32gb (2x16) vs (4x8) THANKS!! Love from Philippines!
I am from bangladesh and i can't find the western digital or sabrent here. I was thinking to go with samsung 980 pro for video editing. Is it a good choice?
you need to take into account things like the absence or presence of DRAM and the amount of SLC cache the SSD's have etc. If the PCIe 3 drive has DRAM and a relatively large SLC cache, while the PCIe 4 drive either doesnt have DRAM at all or less than the PCIe 3 drive, and a smaller SLC cache, then that will obviously have a larger effect in import and export times than the bus interface they are using. They are running on 4 PCIe lanes, meaning that even in the sequential read speed test you did at the start, the PCIe 4 drive is just barely pulling speeds that are faster than PCIe 3 x 4. In "real life" usage such as importing and exporting several files in a Premiere project, it's not going to reach those speeds, meaning that the PCIe 4 drive is not even exhausting the speeds that PCIe 3 is capable of. So it is a bit odd that that is what you choose to focus on when that is nearly irrelevant in these scenarios, and other features like those mentioned above will have a much larger effect on performance
Do you know a website that shows all that data? I'm currently building for the first time and I'm struggling to find DRAM and especially SLC cache sizes.
@Be MySugarDaddy There is a list of drives that has a column for DRAM. Maybe do a search for "ssd with dram" and it'll probably pop up. The list is kinda long and has a lot of info. What I ended up doing was simply checking reviews on the big sites that you can search the reviews. Then search for "dram" and read whether or not folks say it has or doesn't. Can't go wrong with Samsung Pro's or WD Blacks.
@@ungoyone thanks. I went for a Kingston KC3000 512 GB for OS and maybe applications, a WD Black SN850X 2 TB for frequently used data and applications (I think it's overkill but I got it for 179€ with free shipping) and a WD Blue SN570 2TB for Back ups and data I don't need a lot. Have to look into partition but that's what I'm going to work with for now. The SN570 doesn't have dram but should be more than fast enough for its purpose.
u should try comparison of transfering files to other drives that will see which one is more effective. by opening premier is about CPU and RAM nothing to do with SSD
I currently have my OS on a M.2 Drive, and Premiere Cache on another M.2 with the projects and asset files being on a slower 200mb/s HDD. Would I notice a jump in performance if I bought another m.2 drive for the assets and projects, or would this be a marginal difference for the price.
I would like to understand the best SSD combination (bang for buck) for premiere. I mean for OS & programs, active project and source media, scratch and cache... Does it is necesary to have 3 SSD NVMEs?
Good video. It would be interesting to run the same tests using a small NVMe set up as the Adobe Cache drive. You didn't really go into much detail on how you have your computer set-up. Is the OS, Apps, Cache and Media all on the test drive?
Hi Mr. Tech Notice thanks for the awesome video, do you have any recommendations for SSD housing? I assume it's possible to run these drive as externals yes?
Really appreciate your work and I love all your videos. Can you please make a video about which X570 motherboard brand is the best between Gigabyte, Asus, MSI and ASRock?
Great Video just wondered if you could do a video on mix and match like all M.2 for editing and exporting video files vs M.2 for the gunt work, and then use standard SATA drives for output of video. So we can see if you can save a lot of money by being selective on what types of drives we used. Of course, we would always use M.2/SSD of cache files/scratch drives. Bang for buck or pound in your case :)
I work on Adobe Premiere Pro everyday to edit my videos but I'm still using a HDD. I needed this video to make sure if I needed a nvme ssd to make video editing faster. Thanks so much for detailed explanation. Can you please tell me the difference in active time(in task manager) of HDD vs SDD while converting a video or importing/exporting. The 2nd monitor wasn't clearly visible. I have an i7 8700K CPU with 1070Ti + 8GB RAM
I currently have a PCIe 3.0 system drive (1TB WD SN750 SE) and a 1T Samsung T5 external ssd (~550 MB/s) as project, footage, and cache/scratch disc. Now I'm planning on buying a third drive to get the cache/scratch disc on their own drive, but I'm not sure what to get. Should I get a PCIe 3.0 or 4.0 drive as project/footage drive and use the T5 for cache/scratch disc? Or the other way around? I've also read that a drive with DRAM cache is important for the system drive, which the SN750 SE does not have, so another option would be to get a new system drive and use the SN750 SE as scratch drive. Any recommendations for my situation?
Old low-end HDD from 2009 vs any SSD... Modern SATA HDD (WD Gold or Seagate Exos) would be at least twice faster than this "green" from 2009. :) Sure, average SSD wins for editing. HDD this days mostly can be used as a cheaper long term storage or backup / archive.
I just bought a 970 EVO PLUS 1TB M.2 NVME SSD with 3500MB read speed and 3300 write speed, but I also have a 3090 Ti and 5950X, I want to use my PC for 3D modelling. Will my SSD bottleneck? 😔😩🤦♂️
this channel is sooo underrated
😇👍
Super
From my own analysis... youtube really favour US UA-camr. Thats why people opt for tiktok. Easier to get follower globally
It is.
You can tell he doesn't know anything about hardware ...he's basically clueless...he's reading of from either papers or a result instead doing his own analysis which he doesn't do. ....so sad.....
Having 16GBytes of Video Ram certainly helps with scrubbing/editing my 6K footage. A fast NVMe PCIe drive as a cache/temp/scratch disk is a great help. An ordinary SSD for "C: + Apps" is fast enough, as your OS does not necessarily run faster on a NVMe. More RAM does help.
I am debating between a 4tb Sabrent Rocket 3.0 M.2 or a 4TB Seagate FireCuda 530 4TB 4.0 m.2 for my project drive/Dropbox Drive. (I am avoiding the Rocket 4 plus because of its lower endurance ratings). I have a 5950x., 64gb ram, and edit 4k UA-cam vids with B-Roll. In the video, he mentioned noticing slightly faster timeline responsiveness with the pci 4.0 m.2. I wonder if he would have seen this same result if he had a separate scratch disk. Could this advantage over the 3.0 be nullified by my using a fast pci 4.0 m.2 as a scratch disk? Puget systems recommends using a moderately fast SSD for the project disk (saying that a faster won't really make a difference) and a super fast SSD for the scratch disk. I am wondering if the 4.0 is worth the extra $250, or if it will give pretty much the exact same feel as the 3.0 (when using a fast scratch disk). Any thoughts? Thanks!
I've also noticed that when it comes to video editing. Havine RAM that is specificly stated as "supported" on the MOBO can make a big difference. I had 64gb 4000Mhz RAM which my Asus Dark Hero MOBO says it can support up to and beyond that amount. BUT, my ram was not "Specifically" mentioned in its supported ram. Which would cause Davinci Resovle to lock up after a few minutes. After getting 32gb 3600Mhz that is mentioned in the manual. I haven't had an issue. My issue was like having a friend that you got along with playing games, but try working on a project with them and they instantly through a fit.
@@HopeProphecy get the 4.0 one
1 year later im using ur code for the windows keys and it even stacked w their current sale! so happy i found ur channel lately. its been so informative for an editor like myself who edits on his own built system.
Too much efford, thanks for all of that bro. Whenever i try to learn something about creator pc performances you just pop-up! You work so hard for all of us. Very appreciate you are here
You're putting a lot of effort to make these types of videos. Really appreciate your Hardwork brother!!! Keep going on!!!
🙏👍
Regarding Nvme drives' read/write speeds, I seem to recall reading a footnote, which basically states capacity affects its performance. In other words, as the drive fills up, speed decreases. Something to explore on another test of yours, perhaps? Great video. Thanks for sharing!
Good point and idea! :)
This is why samsung drive more expensive the performance will not drop except above 80% filled
@@syarifairlangga4608they aren’t special
I appreciate this investigative type of video. I will love it on a Davinci Resolve use case even more.
👍😇
Thank you so much for this. I'm building a new editing station now but I was really having a hard time deciding on which drives to purchase since I didn't know how they would affect my timeline and rendering. This is also going to affect my motherboard choice with my budget constraints. Thank you so so much!
😇👍
Hi Tech Notice,
I do have:
1To SSD (with Win10 and everything on it)
2To SATA HDD (Not very used.)
Q1-What is your suggestion to make my work with Davinci Resolve more efficient with only theses 2 storage?
Q2-My budget is limited, how big of a boost in performance will I get if I buy another SSD?
Specifications is one thing, but real life is THE thing!
Thanks a lot for ALL your amazing techy video.
I always thumbs up your video to show you the respect you deserve.
Excellent and crisp presentation.
I have disconnected all hard drives and gone to SATAs.
My new NUC (cheaper version) has limited slots.
Man atlast real stuff
Good comparison
Hoping for more imformative video like this
NVMe DRAM Cache size worth mentioning!
quality content. love this! so much input i got from your channel.
Thanks! :)
I really enjoy watching your videos. They are very technical and demonstrate professionalism. I would like to see a test like this at Davinci Resolve. Thanks
👍😇
the best review video of all the ssd and hhd comparison on youtube so far in regards to/for premiere pro. Really appreciate your Hardwork bro, Keep going on... thank you so much.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video, thanks! I was wondering about it too and researched a lot, but you explain it so well and it’s way more fun to watch ;) Greetings from Berlin
Thanks James!
OS = sata3, temp drive for video = NVME :) HD to dump RAW footage. That is how I use it.
👍
The timeline contains mixed clips which is basically different gradient of load on drive which makes a bit off test but is actually real usecase.
HDD to any SSD even to SATA is very huge difference. But, there seem to be not much difference on SATA to NVMe ones. All that matters is random speeds and response time. Though NVMe drives have good sequential speed, random speed are same but response time is faster than SATA ones. So, that could only make a little difference on SSD side.
another brillant vlog my head is bursting with information i have started saveing all the vlogs for reference best tech info site clear to understand and like working with a friend
I'm currently editing on an I7 4770k and will be upgrading to the AMD Ryzen 9 5950X :). I'm finding your videos very useful - Subbed :)
Glad I could help!
You have videos for all important computer things for pc parts and workflow smoothness!
Comparison side by side in every aspect possible is what we need. And the way he delivers saved us huge amount of time trying to figure out but don't have enough equipment and interested to do
3:16 - BTW Intel 11th gen CPUs and motherboards are already out, since 30th of March, you can at least buy those here where I live. Those have PCIe 4.0 and several Z590 chipset boards have 3 M.2 slots. Nice video once again!
Yes, that's right! :)
Time for Gen 5 drive testing.
Great video! What ideal scratch disk-project drive-OS drive config do you recommend for someone who has an NVMe 4.0, and Sata drives?
I think I mentioned some in the end of the video. 🤔😇
Testing a NAS with proper RAID setup and 10Gbit connection (for video editing) could also be interesting to see in the near future! Especially if using SSD drives, not HDDs. Expensive, but not many channels have done videos about that :)
Great idea! 👍
Makes sense, but anyway NASwill be slower even than sata ssd, especially in rendering.
@@govideo3631 that’s good to know, nobody really say anything about this part of NAS
I might be a bit late to the party but is there any way for you to set up a blind test for yourself when it comes to "feeling" the difference between drives? Maybe you have a partner who can open up each project and then you get to say which drive feels faster/snappier/smoother?
That is a genius idea! Blind tests are the true tellers; no heart feels, it's only what the user perceives. I do them with audio set ups when I upgrade a component, and there are times where I surprise myself!
Excellent review! Really enjoyed it the real time performance differences.
4k video scrubbing with 64-128gb ram. i7 12700 12th gen super snappy. m2 for OS. m2 for Media. M2 for temp folder. 1TB for Archives
thx for the comparison, I'm actually looking to find a good price/performance nvme for photo editing and exporting animation videos based on OpenGL. And, also the best nvme for using and loading VSTs in Cubase. For now, PCI 3.0 seems the best deal. take care!
Fabulous man! Thanks for this.
👍😇
Grabbed myself a Samsung 980 1tb (gen 3 drive) for £80 to put in my new build. It's currently available at that price on ccl computers for anyone looking to purchase one
To distill all I've learned: HDD for storage only. Forget PCIE3.0. Choose between SATA SSD and PCIE4.0. If you can afford the latter, get it. If you can't SATA SSD is the next best value for money.
PCIE3.0 for most applications isn't a good enough improvement on SATA SSD to warrant the price hike.
This is the Best Comparison Video Ever! i am using normal hdd and i was guessing maybe my graphics card is not enough because i have i9 processor and my premier playback sucks so bad!! i guess now i know i have to use nvme ssds only while editing. normal hdds sucks.
I hope there's an after effects test of this. your channel is super cool
thanks for sharing man, this is one that I was looking for. appreciate your hard work. keep it up.
Glad I could help!
Actually, I would have expected you to include one of the Optane P 1600x series. Their 4k write times are still unmatched by PCIe 4.0 and 5.0. Would have been interesting to see them compare to those NAND-drives in workload scenarios.
Love the video. Cheers
Nice video as always 👍 Could you make a vodeo about how you work with your black and white PC? You build in a 3.0 and a 4.0 storage drive, so it would be interesting to know what you store where. Thanks a lot!
👍🤔
Thanks a lot man, editing with my hdd is a pain in the ass, i dont really like editing more because its too slow but tomorrow ill buy a ssd i hope my passion to edit returns when i get the ssd m2 thanks a lot man, you are the only one who has this video thanks a lot:)))
I'm glad I could help!
are you getting the gen 3 or gen 4?
@@NetSkillNavigator i bought a gen 3, my pc only accepts gen 3
Nice video. Check out the hynix p31 gold drives. Excellent price to performance.
To be fair, I'd never use a green drive for work data just archive. My current 12TB WD work drives have a read/write in the 250MB/sec range (2.5x faster than your green) but about to upgrade to 8TB 7.4/5.5GB/s in the mac studio.
Question, when you compare the hdd vs ssd vs m2 etc. Does that also mean the footage HAS to be on that drive to use its power? Like if my footage is on an hdd but adobe on an ssd, will it mean i get hdd playback?
i want to know this too
Such a great video my friend!!
I highly recommend to make a video about RAM in terms of creating different video qualities in Premier Pro, just don't include gaming since many yt channels did that.
do we need 16gb, 32gb, 64gb? Such as rending 4k vids is enough to benchmark, so it wont consume much time for testing.
And does it affect if we use 4 rams than 2 pairs of ram? Like 32gb (2x16) vs (4x8) THANKS!! Love from Philippines!
Thanks, and great idea! ;)
@@theTechNotice Lets go my friend!! So i won't breaking my wallet for the ram hehehe 😁😁
Great test, thank you!
Thanks, I always assumed it didn't matter. I switched to editing from an NVME Samsung 980 and it's much faster to scrub
Great video!!! Thank you!!
TLDR: yes.
Thanks for your extra efforts. 🙂
great video and great job man
I am from bangladesh and i can't find the western digital or sabrent here. I was thinking to go with samsung 980 pro for video editing. Is it a good choice?
Thank you!
This was awesome, thank you. You saved me $$$
This is gold! Very helpfull, thank you
To be clear, you tested these with the drives internally installed right? Not externally with cables?
Great info. Thanks for the effort. BTW, what benq monitor are you using?
you need to take into account things like the absence or presence of DRAM and the amount of SLC cache the SSD's have etc. If the PCIe 3 drive has DRAM and a relatively large SLC cache, while the PCIe 4 drive either doesnt have DRAM at all or less than the PCIe 3 drive, and a smaller SLC cache, then that will obviously have a larger effect in import and export times than the bus interface they are using.
They are running on 4 PCIe lanes, meaning that even in the sequential read speed test you did at the start, the PCIe 4 drive is just barely pulling speeds that are faster than PCIe 3 x 4. In "real life" usage such as importing and exporting several files in a Premiere project, it's not going to reach those speeds, meaning that the PCIe 4 drive is not even exhausting the speeds that PCIe 3 is capable of. So it is a bit odd that that is what you choose to focus on when that is nearly irrelevant in these scenarios, and other features like those mentioned above will have a much larger effect on performance
Do you know a website that shows all that data? I'm currently building for the first time and I'm struggling to find DRAM and especially SLC cache sizes.
@Be MySugarDaddy There is a list of drives that has a column for DRAM. Maybe do a search for "ssd with dram" and it'll probably pop up. The list is kinda long and has a lot of info.
What I ended up doing was simply checking reviews on the big sites that you can search the reviews. Then search for "dram" and read whether or not folks say it has or doesn't. Can't go wrong with Samsung Pro's or WD Blacks.
@@ungoyone thanks. I went for a Kingston KC3000 512 GB for OS and maybe applications, a WD Black SN850X 2 TB for frequently used data and applications (I think it's overkill but I got it for 179€ with free shipping) and a WD Blue SN570 2TB for Back ups and data I don't need a lot. Have to look into partition but that's what I'm going to work with for now. The SN570 doesn't have dram but should be more than fast enough for its purpose.
All of the SSDs shown here have DRAM cache.
u should try comparison of transfering files to other drives that will see which one is more effective. by opening premier is about CPU and RAM nothing to do with SSD
this list of other PCIe4xgen4 reaches 7GB/s :
SAMSUNG 980 PRO
GIGABYTE AORUS Gen4 7000s
Corsair MP600 Pro
Eye opening….great info!
Glad you enjoyed it!
love this vid thank you so much!
I love your Videos they are unique. Thanks 🙏🏻
Thank you!
@@theTechNotice your welcome 🙂🙏🏻🙏🏻
RAID 0 with say 6x SSD Sata for now it will be cheaper, have more space say 4Tb hard drives *6 = 24 TB and have very similar speeds, right?
i thought my monitor was wicked dirty for a second. then i realized it was just the table. damn you 4k
🤣🤣
Should do an AE ram preview test.
I currently have my OS on a M.2 Drive, and Premiere Cache on another M.2 with the projects and asset files being on a slower 200mb/s HDD. Would I notice a jump in performance if I bought another m.2 drive for the assets and projects, or would this be a marginal difference for the price.
What about a cache? I've heard that a 3.0 with a good cache is better than a 4.0 without, but I haven't seen test results.
nice information and so good presentation and nice compare
ITs a toss up TBW or brute speed... IF you were working with lots of data writing and deleting, I;d look at the high TBW rathr than just speed.
Thanks mate 👍
Is there an update to this video? I am really curious if Gen 4 NVMEs have a big difference in export times in newer Premiere versions. Thanks!
great. thanks for the video!
I would like to understand the best SSD combination (bang for buck) for premiere. I mean for OS & programs, active project and source media, scratch and cache... Does it is necesary to have 3 SSD NVMEs?
Check out my video on Pro Storage Workflow :)
this video is god damn helpful
thanks for putting much effort on this test
Thanks Kyle, clad it was helpful! :)
Thanks brother for saving my hard earn money. Love you❤️
Excellent video. Thank you! What do you think of using multiple NVME for premiere pro?
Great video! Thanks!
👍🙏
Is sabrent reliable thou? I've had nothing but bad luck with their products, but Samsung has never ever let me down?!?
How about 1tb vs 500gb capacity ?
That matter ??
Good video. It would be interesting to run the same tests using a small NVMe set up as the Adobe Cache drive. You didn't really go into much detail on how you have your computer set-up. Is the OS, Apps, Cache and Media all on the test drive?
The OS is separate all the rest is on the Test Drive :)
@@theTechNotice Good to hear that, I too had the same doubt
@@theTechNotice finally you are not holding puget systems sheets and saying some random stuff
Good editing practices makes editing smoother.....like not using GPU-hungry h264 to edit.
Hi Mr. Tech Notice thanks for the awesome video, do you have any recommendations for SSD housing? I assume it's possible to run these drive as externals yes?
Very good! Tks
thank you for this,
Really appreciate your work and I love all your videos. Can you please make a video about which X570 motherboard brand is the best between Gigabyte, Asus, MSI and ASRock?
Thanks! They're all good depends what you like :)
It would make more sense to use a WD Black 7200 HD instead of a WD Green 5400 HD... the Green is not a performance drive.
id love to know the disk speeds of the two internal ssd's
thank you for your efforts
It's my pleasure
Between SATA SSD and NVMe isnt big gap in real use 💥😀
Regards from Europe from my channel 💥😀👍
Wich one does boot the fast starting up a PC??????i mean only BIOS plus Windows.
thank you
Gen 4 does feel slightly snappier at times.
Can you do the same for photoeditors? Photoshop / Lightroom work?
Great Video just wondered if you could do a video on mix and match like all M.2 for editing and exporting video files vs M.2 for the gunt work, and then use standard SATA drives for output of video. So we can see if you can save a lot of money by being selective on what types of drives we used. Of course, we would always use M.2/SSD of cache files/scratch drives. Bang for buck or pound in your case :)
Great idea :)
@@theTechNotice I would love to see the results in one of your videos. Keep up the great work mate!
I work on Adobe Premiere Pro everyday to edit my videos but I'm still using a HDD. I needed this video to make sure if I needed a nvme ssd to make video editing faster. Thanks so much for detailed explanation. Can you please tell me the difference in active time(in task manager) of HDD vs SDD while converting a video or importing/exporting. The 2nd monitor wasn't clearly visible. I have an i7 8700K CPU with 1070Ti + 8GB RAM
The true is that it doesn't matter, the only thing that matters is the performance. You need more RAM too.
New subscriber! Your channel is underrated! Do you notice a difference when working with the project files and footage on another SSD nvme m2?
I currently have a PCIe 3.0 system drive (1TB WD SN750 SE) and a 1T Samsung T5 external ssd (~550 MB/s) as project, footage, and cache/scratch disc. Now I'm planning on buying a third drive to get the cache/scratch disc on their own drive, but I'm not sure what to get.
Should I get a PCIe 3.0 or 4.0 drive as project/footage drive and use the T5 for cache/scratch disc? Or the other way around? I've also read that a drive with DRAM cache is important for the system drive, which the SN750 SE does not have, so another option would be to get a new system drive and use the SN750 SE as scratch drive. Any recommendations for my situation?
Old low-end HDD from 2009 vs any SSD... Modern SATA HDD (WD Gold or Seagate Exos) would be at least twice faster than this "green" from 2009. :)
Sure, average SSD wins for editing. HDD this days mostly can be used as a cheaper long term storage or backup / archive.
Did you clean the Premiere Pro Cache-files and RAM between the tests?
I just bought a 970 EVO PLUS 1TB M.2 NVME SSD with 3500MB read speed and 3300 write speed, but I also have a 3090 Ti and 5950X, I want to use my PC for 3D modelling. Will my SSD bottleneck? 😔😩🤦♂️