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Thanks for the correction, Dafydd. I did mean shadow files, not hardware acceleration. I concur with you that his CPU is going to be stressed editing HD, but when I read his dxdiag file, admittedly early this morning, if I remember correctly, it showed two NVidia GTX 650s, I think, each with almost a 1 GB of dedicated video RAM and his drivers were less than three months old, so I don't think GPU power should be an issue for his computer. Perhaps, and it wouldn't be the first time, I didn't read the dxdiag file correctly.
Further education is always welcome. I am here to learn and to help, when I can. Have a great day.
Regards,
-Phil
Ooops, ha ha. Yep you're right Phil. I didn't trawl down the diagnostic... Sunday evening and I'd been outside working on various tasks all day, my only excuse for not observing the data fully.
So... in addition to what Phil has put here's some more input.
1. In my view you should boost your Ram. 8gb is a minimum in my view having used a system with that amount.
2. Your CPU is too light, I've edited with a set up similar and PDR will drag when stressed and you need to have a more powerful setup to have a more comfortable experience.
3. Video storage location. If on the USB, you'll experience slow data transfer and the WD My Book (I have one still operating, another two failed.) it goes in a slow start up energy saving sequence. You need to "ping" it with a software like NoHDSleep to keep it active.
4. Shadow edit files - unconfirmed. Your system should be ok without this capability running. If set it'll just use the CPU up. You should be able to edit HD without too much hassle so long as you don't stress it with too many tracks, or additional effects and too many titles. You may hit a problem when trying to play in Movie or clip mode as the data needs to be processed on the fly before viewing.
5. Titles issue - sort of explained in 4.
The above is just an opinion.
Dafydd