I appreciate your idea of editing the registry keys, although it seems a little heavy-handed to me. when playing a timeline with a lot of effects, my gtx1060 doesnt get used at all, like 5% at max.Īdobe please come up with a fix!! Last year everything worked fine without any problems!! That it would be nice to use the power of our GTX cards again.Īdditionally, timeline playback performance slowed down as well. Idealy premiere would use my gtx1060 for rendering, and has previously done, like last year everything worked just fine!Īdobe should have a fix for this by now!!! otherwise everybody using gtx1060,1070,1080 has useless gpus that they can not use for premiere rendering.Īnd i agree that rendering is CPU intensive but when i do a heavy export like 4k timeline with four 4k clips in it playing at the same time with gaussian blur and lumetri color put on, two playing in reverse I even receive usage of my onboard graphics of like 86%. I can deactivate my onboard graphics but when i do, it renders cpu only and leaves my gtx1060 unused. Render times are much much faster if you leave the integrated gpu turned on. Hello I am having the exact same issues as you all. Again, I would paste a link to this forum in your report. However, based upon my knowledge, I believe that the GPU should be used more than what it currently is. But, we have to remember that exporting is a very CPU intensive process. Again, all we can do is file a bug report and HOPE that Adobe will spend some of their resources to fix this issue. As far as I know, there has not been any updates to this problem. It does look as if you are having the same problem as the rest of us. The conclusion that I have come to is that this is just a bug that has gone under Adobe's radar. If you do file a bug report, I would paste a link to this forum in your report. Either way, I appreciate your post, but all I can suggest is to submit a bug report. Yours is interesting because your sniffer did not even list that your CPU has integrated graphics. The results that you have posted in the image of your post show that you are having the same issue as the rest of us. Let's see what we can find (and thank you for keeping this thread alive), I don't think we as users can really do much else. However, and as far as I know, the only thing to do from there is to just submit a bug report to Adobe. Then, if people could take screenshots and post them here, I think we may have solid evidence of a bug. You can look at my screenshot to see how I did it. cd C:\Program Files\Adobe\Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2018 Then type "cmd" (without quotes) and hit enter. This can be done by pressing the Window's logo + R on your keyboard to open the run window. So, to initiate the test, first open your command prompt. I think that is in the best interest of all of us. I think if that all come back similar, we have probably found a bug, just like you said. I ran the same test on my PC and got similar results.īecause of this, I am curious if other people in this thread would run this test, what their results would be. I really had given up on this issue a while ago, but now that you bring this up, I am once again intrigued. Screenshots (Premiere running, Rendering previews for a project of mine): Screenshots (Idle, Premiere Pro loaded and open, not rendering): The file currently lists "GeForce GTX 1060".ħth Gen Intel i7-7700K Processor (No current overclock) I have done that, and I have tried both typing "GeForce GTX 1060" and "GeForce GTX 1060 6GB" into the document, but its the same story for both cases: it uses my integrated graphics. I have also done some research of my own, and I have come across adding the "cuda_supported_cards.txt" into Premiere Pro's installation directory. Notice that under GPU Engine in Task Manager, it lists GPU 0, my integrated graphics. Below I have listed my system specs and screenshots for reference to the issue. I also have a fully updated Creative Suite. I am running a fresh install of Windows 10 with the latest updates. It seems that Premiere Pro is using my integrated graphics on my CPU rather than using my installed and working dedicated graphics card to render GPU accelerated effects and such. Hello all, I have a quick, but important question about Premiere Pro CC 2018.
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