tonester wrote:Thanks. That is definitely good advice. Since I only have 2 external HD's, I'll probably keep the MSSI and Ivory on that one. I do keep DP project files there too, though. Is it better to have a different drive altogether
for those?
i know with Sonar, I had a separate HD for the project files, rather than the "C" drive in windows that the program files were on, as was recommended. Does the same hold true for Mac?
tony
Hmm. I'd never gotten into the underbelly of Windows, always had been Mac.
Generally speaking, the project folder (and its audio files) stand a better chance running from a dedicated drive for the same reasons overall performance improves when active VI libraries are streaming from dedicated drives. Laptops and iMacs have inherent limits with expansion. I had to get an eSATA PCIe host card just to open up enough resources for larger projects on my MacPro (and previous G5).
How much a person needs hinges on how busy their projects are. If things are running very well, then it's probably not a problem. Once things like streaming glitches or sample drop outs begin to surface, it's probably worth considering how much data one has running along a single buss.
Internal SATA (other then the internal drive running OSX) + Firewire are two options. Older Firewire is a relatively narrow buss and not always ideal for larger projects. Samples just get clogged too often along the 33Mhz bandwidth. New Firewire busses are now running at SATA speeds, so running several Firewire drives will max out with much higher data loads.
An external Firewire card host is probably the next step towards expansion (with a tower and one available PCIe slot). If one already has Firewire drives, connection is just a matter of having enough cables.
eSATA or eSATA II is the next step up in quantity, quality, and cost. A 4 or 5 drive enclosure offers a tremendous performance jump, but it might be overkill for some users. However, hard drives are VERY easy to outgrow.
Some are praising the speed of solid state drives, but it's not just the drive itself at issue here. Internal SATA, eSATA, Firewire card hosting--- all of these offer separate data paths *as well as* additional library storage. Those separate data paths are what really help.
I have a comparatively small drive, a Raptor 10k rmp 150GB, just for DP projects and associated audio. Once projects are done I archive and off-load them, keeping that particular drive clean. That one drive can pretty much handle the audio for the busiest projects I do for an entire CD's worth of tacks. All of my VIs run from other drives, leaving the system drive alone to handle OSX tasks associated with Virtual Memory caching.
I would avoid streaming along the USB buss-- at least until USB 3.0 appears. USB2 tends to chop up streaming data into chunks, streams them through, then stops to collect another chunk before it streams. That could kill a project that demands more than USB2 can offer. But for simpler projects it might be plenty enough. The only way to tell is to give it a try to see where all of these options top out.
Hope that helps.