Carsten Sellberg wrote:Higher CUDA/OpenCL performance is better.
I like that you can differentiate from shaders, compute units and cuda cores and the APIs CUDA and OpenCL which are different things.
thafool wrote:I'm going based off the hardware reqs I found here in the forum (below), but they don't give any direction on performance.
In Resolve FP32 compute performance is what matters the most in >90% of cases. Get the highest FP32 compute GPU with the highest VRAM you can afford. Either AMD/Mac/nVidia. As a general guide.
The differences between them are in niche scenarios for which you're better to go look at some benchmarks from reputable sources like Puget which does a breakdown of benchmarks that are workflow specific.
For example if you use a 8K Red RAW and ProRes workflow then a card's 20% improvement in noise reduction or "neural engine" makes no sense if its 150% slower in Red RAW and ProRes. Or it doesn't even work properly with 8K+ material if its VRAM starved (like the 8GB nVidia cards regardless of cuda cores).
Note down your specific workflow and look at benchmarks that reflect it. Don't get blanket statements that this is better than that based on brand alone. It doesn't apply, it never applied.