Firewire Hd: 400 Or 800?!?, External hard drive |
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Sun 5 Dec 2004, 17:40
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Newbie
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From: Fairfax - US
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Hi guys! I need to buy an external hard drive to use with Protools and my powerbook 17" 1.5 GHz. I would like to know what do you think about the differences between a LaCie Big Disk Extreme 320GB with a Firewire 800 - Oxford 912-8Mb and a Maxtor OneTouch™ II - 300GB with a Firewire 400 - Oxford 911-16 Mb.
Everytime a read a review it's always about people that use the hd for pro video/photo, I would like to know something about the ProAudio needs. Thanks!
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Sun 5 Dec 2004, 18:36
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Junior Member
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From: Brookfield, IL. - US
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For both audio and video, you'll want the fastest data transfer speed. Firewire 400 is the equivalent of USB 2.0, which will get the job done, but is much slower in comparison to Firewire 800. And if you're still undecided, why not get a LaCie d2 Hard Drive Extreme with Triple Interface. http://www.lacie.com/products/product.htm?pid=10025Firewire 800 / 7200 rpm / 8 0r 16MB Buffer is the way to go. As to Lacie vs. Maxtor, ..That's really a personal choice. Western Digital has some pretty nice external drives, as well. In fact, I'm thinking of getting...... http://microcenter.com/single_product_resu...duct_id=0169867Good luck to ya
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Sun 5 Dec 2004, 19:09
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Newbie
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Thanks for the answer! So you suggest the triple interface one instead of the big disk extreme 320? Do you think there is a difference between the 2 models that is not just the opportunity of having the USB 2? Thanks again!
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Sun 5 Dec 2004, 22:16
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Junior Member
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If you feel you'd need to have the 3 options(USB 2.0, Firewire 400 & 800), then by all means get the triple face. As to the 320GB, you might find this article helpful... http://www.barefeats.com/fire45.htmlI noticed you posted at the Digidesign User Conference Forums as well. Good luck
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Sun 5 Dec 2004, 22:27
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Newbie
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I liked your answer, pretty clear and it's what I was looking for. Alright, let's say that I have to use it with a 17" Powerbook 1.5 GHz and Protools. But now I'm more confused...eh ehe eh . Alright, if I get a double disk I'll have 60MB instead of 40 but the risk of MTBF, and if I have a single disk I get the 40 MB/sec. What about this lacie: http://www.lacie.com/products/product.htm?pid=10489http://www.lacie.com/products/product.htm?pid=10489Now I'm more confused...
This post has been edited by kd_rome: Sun 5 Dec 2004, 22:28
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Mon 6 Dec 2004, 17:36
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Newbie
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Yeah Nels, I posted the same question on the Digidesign forum too... I was cecking this page http://www.barefeats.com/fire45.htmlbut I can't understand something: what does Dual 2 channel and Dual 1 channel mean? Thanks for the previous answer!
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Wed 8 Dec 2004, 07:07
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Rookie
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From: Victoria - CA
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QUOTE (kd_rome @ Dec 6 2004, 16:36) I was cecking this page http://www.barefeats.com/fire45.htmlbut I can't understand something: what does Dual 2 channel and Dual 1 channel mean? Two Channel vs One channel refers to Firewire ports and whether the machine has a separate Firewire interface chip for each port, or whether the 2 ports are simply attached to a single interface chip. Think of a garden hose. If you take one hose and put a Y-splitter on the nozzle end, you have two "ports" but only one "channel" -- the same amount of water will come out, just 1/2 on each nozzle. Now think of two different hoses connected to different taps, each one can deliver the full volume to its output (Port) This is two channel, much wetter (er.. faster). This is also the reason why Firewire audio interfaces perform less well when you daisy-chain a hard drive off them; the drive data is contending with the audio data in the same hose (channel). Setting up two-channel Firewire on most Macs requires installing a PCI Firewire card, or a PCMCIA Firewire interface on a Powerbook. G5's have two channels, one for FW400 and one for FW800, so put the audio interface on the FW400 and the hard drive on the FW800. Two FW800 channels still requires a card. A couple of the high end G4 towers had two FW400 channels, most didn't. Barefeats found that when you use two channel Firewire the performance of a dual-drive setup is much better, simply because all the data is not trying to push through a single channel. Their reference to "D2 Dual 1 Channel" refers to the drive they were testing; the "LaCie D2 Dual" drive which has 2 drives in one case. They tested this drive with both 1-channel and 2-channel connections. Ourmanflinty: Barefeats showed that the same Parallel IDE 7200 RPM Hitachi drive had significantly better throughput on Firewire 800 - about 50% better in fact - so I don't believe that Firewire 400 is higher in real-world throughput than the drive itself. http://www.barefeats.com/fire35.htmlThanks Trevor CanadaRAM.com[/B]
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