|
External Hard Drives, Do I really need Glyph? |
|
|
|
Fri 27 Sep 2002, 15:44
|
Maniac Member
Group: Members
Posts: 799
Joined: 24-Mar 02
From: Entre-Deux-Mers - FR
Member No.: 3,984
|
"...noticed that some recordings seemed to have minor skips or "hicups" in some tracks" Thanks Synthetic. I've often heard not to use the internal drive for audio, but never been told why. I haven't therefore taken the warnings seriously. Haven't noticed the hiccup/skip problem yet, but then I've not much experience either. For the moment I just trash what I don't like. "don't use your internal hd for audio recording/playback if it is the drive you boot your daw from! try to keep one third of the available space on your boot drive available. regularly optimize a regularly USED audio drive backup regularly... 8-)" Thanks for advice Damann too. I may follow it ;-) Any more info on why? Perhaps 1 or 2 track recording doesn't lead to the problems encountered with 8-tracks. Concerning 800Mb/sec FW, I wonder how many Mb/sec small projects really need.
--------------------
Without shit, we wouldn't be here ;)
|
|
|
|
|
Sat 28 Sep 2002, 11:14
|
Maniac Member
Group: Members
Posts: 645
Joined: 17-May 02
From: Broughton
Member No.: 4,705
|
Synthetic has got it exactly right - home recordists can produce some excellent work. It's probably not going to compete with a Shania Twain or Jamiroquai album, even if they are using the same software (I know Jay Kay used Logic Platinum to record his last album), but it's still going to sound pretty good. A lot of the early house records - and I'm talking massive global hits, here - were recorded on 4-track machines and mastered from cassette. This was the early '90s, too - not the '70s! So anything you can do on a modern Mac has the potential to sound fantastic. I've tried quite a few of the new USB interfaces (Mbox, both Tascam 428 and 224, Edirol UA-5 and UA-700, Swissonic Studio-D) and - in my opinion, for what it's worth - they're all fine for audio work. As Joe Meek said, if it sounds right, it IS right. And he was recording vocals on the staircase of his flat on the Holloway Road in London. As for the new high-speed FireWire, talking to a friend who works on a Mac magazine here in the UK, he's not heard about any new products featuring 1394b due for release in the next few months. So if you need a FireWire drive now, you might as well get one rather than hang about waiting. Current FireWire speeds are still pretty nippy.
|
|
|
|
|
Mon 2 Dec 2002, 12:31
|
Newbie
Group: Members
Posts: 1
Joined: 02-Dec 02
From: Boise - US
Member No.: 9,753
|
Pardon the warming-up of leftovers from the back of the fridge, fellas -- looks like this topic's been dormant for a couple months. I thought it might be nice, though, in my first post here to share some (hopefully) useful information I've found, and possibly get an answer to my question. I couldn't find any recent updated thorough info on this as of last week, so I did a little digging myself.
Of the pros I spoke with who are currently either using or building their Mac-based digital home studios, most are saying the same things, which are as follows.
First off, FireWire external drives are the most popular choice. They're easy to implement, cheap, fast, and reliable.
Two main components are to be considered in the process of shopping for an external FireWire drive: The IDE drive itself, and the "box" within which it resides.
The drive's size is somewhat important-- those that have a 40GB or smaller all say they wish they'd paid the extra cash for an 80GB; those with 80GB or higher are happy. The drive's SPEED is more important-- all recommend 7200rpm drives. Also, if you can get it already formatted for Mac, that's even better, as the formatting process can be a bit weird over FireWire...? I don't know enough about this. More digging for another future post, perhaps.
Now for the box-- the most important features (in order) are the chipset, case material, and items inside the case other than the chipset and drive. Consistently the Oxford 911 chipset was recommended. Aluminum is the case material of choice because of its heat-dissipating qualities. And fans, even "quiet" ones, are generally avoided (and not really needed with aluminum cases anyway). Also, if you can get a case with an external power supply, this reduces the heat in the case even more (though it might add another "wall wart" AC Power Adaptor to your setup-- blechh!!).
With that in mind... You can buy an ideal drive (80GB, 7200RPM) for well under $100 US dollars, and a good case (Oxford 911 chipset, aluminum case, no fan, external power supply) for around $50 through the right auction.
One thing I didn't even think to ask of the people I spoke to (and they didn't mention it, so maybe it's not a big deal?) was the cache size -- 2MB is common, 8MB is possible but not as readily available. ANYONE, do you know if this is a concern?
FYI www.eshop.macsales.com has a pretty decent deal going right now-- one of their setups is for a 100GB drive with the 8MB cache and all the other good things mentioned above, plus a 2yr warranty, for around $275. Still think dropping $400 on a comparable Glyph drive is worth it?
Cheers, all -- and if you find out about that whole cache conundrum, fill me in, k?
|
|
|
|
|
Tue 3 Dec 2002, 01:22
|
Senior Member
Group: Members
Posts: 296
Joined: 10-Aug 02
From: Rimghobb - UA
Member No.: 6,734
|
If I've posted this before, it bears repeating. My experience with the OWC Mercury Elite series has been excellent, and I recommend that anyone shopping for an external firewire drive at least take a look at these in yer comparison shopping: http://eshop.macsales.com/Catalog_Page.cfm...e=FW&Template=1The Elite cases are pretty handsome, too, housed in clear plastic, ala G4s, with a smart blue power light that can double as a nightlight. The pictures on the page don't do it justice. It's also quiet. OWC sells the parts for rolling your own external firewire drive if you prefer to go that route, but with the Elites, they've done the work. Worth a look.
|
|
|
|
|
Wed 4 Dec 2002, 17:26
|
Junior Member
Group: Members
Posts: 103
Joined: 30-Oct 02
From: Los Angeles - US
Member No.: 8,882
|
Hmmm...I know this is an old thread, but I must say it does tickle me to read that some mac musicians had been wondering why they had problems recording/playing back audio when they had been using their internal BOOT drive as their AUDIO drive.... The mac is continuously accessing the system drive for system related read/write to/from memory instructions, and I feel that it ought to be common knowledge that it is definitely not the place to be recording/playing back audio from/to!! It's no wonder users get 'interruptions' in their recordings...the system drive is already busy dealing with the...er...SYSTEM! I have always had a separate drive for audio...even back in 1996 when drives were not that fast (the problems even more obvious back then.) I can see it now...the audio drive is completely "free from traffic" on it's I/O ribbon cable, whereas there is always a stream of data moving up & down the system drive's I/O ribbon cable..er...ho hum
--------------------
Nobody can take from you what you give freely.
|
|
|
|
1 User(s) are reading this topic (1 Guests and 0 Anonymous Users)
0 Members:
|
|