You need a 2 GB VRAM for HD, a 4GB VRAM for 4K. That is probably why your sub-HD proxies are doing fine playing on their own. Sorry for the frustration, but it appears that your laptop doesn't meet minimum specs for HD, much less 4K. If it does not, you'll have performance problems. Make sure the hardware meets minimum system requirements.It will turn blue in color once you do so. Make sure you have added the Toggle Proxies button from the Button Editor to the Playback Controls, then enable the button.The problem can be solved in a couple of ways. Graphics Intel Iris Pro 1536 MB (not the ideal card, but pls remember that the proxy file plays back fine on its own) Premiere Pro 13.1.5 (Seeing same issues in 14.2) It seems like in some instances Premiere doesn't work well with attached proxies - even though it can play & manipulate the actual proxy file just fine on its own. I came across this post from December that was never solved, but experienced the same exact issue. This leads me to believe it is a software issue, not a hardware issue. When using the proxy file directly on the timeline, all of this is super smooth. Trying to adjust setting and sliders in effects panels is painfully slow. When using the attached proxy version (as opposed to putting the proxy file directly on the timeline), not only does the playback suffer, but the performance of my entire computer suffers. ![]() I experimented by importing the proxy file directly into the session and on to the timeline. Only slightly better performance than trying to play 4k footage on it's own. I thought it was my system but now after doing some experimenting, it looks like a software issue. I've been using Premiere for years and never had a great experience with proxies.
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