I switched from an ATI to an NVidia Card, and thought that the BD Ripper is now much faster. Unfortunately, the speedup is 1% at best.
The NVidia Card is rather high end (overclocked GTX 460), and the CPU is rather old (Q6600), so the difference should be biggger.
Before switching the card, I got about 43fps in bluray ripping (from an ISO image, not from a real BluRay disk). The CPU was at 100% with all four cores.
Settings were CoreAVC for decoding, Software for encoding.
Now, with the new graphics card installed, everything is about the same:
CPU at 100% on all four cores, Graphics Card fan is whirring, so I assume the card has something to do, but I only get 44fps.
The only setting I changed is the encoding, to CUDA+Software. It tells me in the window "CUDA GPU acceleration for video encoding enabled".
Is there something wrong here, or is CUDA 100% useless?
Thanks, Martin
Update: In a small tool I can see that the GPU load is between 7 and 10%. So it appears that CUDA is barely used, while the CPU is stuck at 100% load.
The NVidia Card is rather high end (overclocked GTX 460), and the CPU is rather old (Q6600), so the difference should be biggger.
Before switching the card, I got about 43fps in bluray ripping (from an ISO image, not from a real BluRay disk). The CPU was at 100% with all four cores.
Settings were CoreAVC for decoding, Software for encoding.
Now, with the new graphics card installed, everything is about the same:
CPU at 100% on all four cores, Graphics Card fan is whirring, so I assume the card has something to do, but I only get 44fps.
The only setting I changed is the encoding, to CUDA+Software. It tells me in the window "CUDA GPU acceleration for video encoding enabled".
Is there something wrong here, or is CUDA 100% useless?
Thanks, Martin
Update: In a small tool I can see that the GPU load is between 7 and 10%. So it appears that CUDA is barely used, while the CPU is stuck at 100% load.
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