mickspixels wrote:I think it is impossible for most users to answer these sorts of questions as most of us don't have two such powerful machines to compare directly.
Yes, I was thinking that, but you never know!
That's a very interesting thread. Thank you.
mickspixels wrote:One thing I would suggest is that you could reduce your costs not insignificantly by getting just 1TB of internal storage instead of 4TB and using external SSDs, as these are way, way cheaper than internal Apple storage. They don't even have to be incredibly fast for most purposes.
Good point. I was thinking of perhaps having 2TB (to be sure of having enough of the superfast SSD spare), and then getting one of these, which gives me 16TB and RAID for about the same price as the difference between 2 and 8TB on the mac.
https://eshop.macsales.com/item/OWC/TB3TBV4T16/mickspixels wrote:Reading the thread, I think the big issue here is your use of Fusion. It's not clear how much you want or need to use Fusion but there are numerous posts (as Steve's here) about Fusion being problematic on Macs (particularly on Silicon Macs?). I don't use Fusion myself so can't comment directly. However, if you are not already deep into Fusion, perhaps consider Apple Motion instead as Uli mentons above. It is only £50 (last time I looked), it can do an awful lot of interesting stuff and it runs very well on Macs (given that it is made by Apple).
Hadn't thought of that. I'm self taught, started on Premier Pro, got really bogged down in after effects, then discovered Resolve and love it. Find Fusion so much more logical. Love that it is all part of the same workflow. I read that Motion is very different and more difficult to learn. But as you say, for £50 might be worth taking it for a spin!
mickspixels wrote:If you are shooting ProRes 4K on a Ninja, then you will have no problem with any of the machines you mention with editing and grading in Resolve. In fact your existing machine is more than good enough for any of this. I know - I have the same specced machine and I can grade 8K NRAW with no problem at all, as well as 4K ProRes Raw, BRAW etc. Motion is no problem either. Maybe investing in a quality monitor if you don't already have one would be a better move if you were to go down this path.
I do find that adding certain effects, such as retiming, on the timeline does slow things to a crawl.
But a good quality monitor ... that's a whole different question!
I currently use a 34" ultrawide IPS:
https://www.lg.com/us/monitors/lg-34wk9 ... de-monitorHave thought about switching to OLED or microled, but so far at least, only finding curved screens, which I imagine would not be great for video editing (I presume it would be more difficult to judge straight lines on a bendy screen. Of course there is this:
https://www.corsair.com/uk/en/p/monitor ... 9030001-pe, but it is only 3,440 by 1,440 on a 45 inch screen, so I dont think that's any good. So far not finding any flat OLED ultrawide screens around 34".
John Waldmann wrote:Assuming the M3 studio turns up next year, you may be better off, as a mother post recomended addressing your monitor upgrades in the mean time.
As a rule of thumb Historically Apple's odd numbered device generations are the sweet spot. so M1 /M3 / M5 ... are the ones to buy.
From what I read, the problem is that the M3 ultra wont likely arrive till very late 24 or even 25. And if I wait till then, no doubt there will be a case for waiting for the M4. Also, my understanding is that the greatest gains have come from switching to apple silicon, and then sticking two chips together. I'm not sure there will be such an enormous step forward again in the next few years???
Thanks again everyone for all your thoughts. Really helpful and much appreciated.