I've seen dozens of posts about external Firewire drives and Vegas. I had no problems with my Maxtor Firewire drive, but then someone gave me a Western Digital drive, and it had problems. I decided to do some controlled tests. Here are the results.
I did this on a Polywell 2.8 GHz P4. I connected my Sony TRV-11 and used it both for capture and playback to an external monitor. My Maxtor Firewire is a One-Touch model, and the Western Digital is a WD800.
I connected each on, in turn, to the same cable (i.e., only one drive was connected at one time, and they were not daisy-chained). I connected my Sony TRV-11 camcorder to the other port on my two-port Firewire card.
Capture
I was able to capture to either drive without any problems. No dropped frames.
Timeline playback
I was able to play back from the Vegas timeline, through my camcorder to an external monitor from the Maxtor. Everything worked exactly the same as playing back from an internal IDE hard drive. No problems.
From the Western Digital drive, however, when I clicked on the Vegas "Preview on External Monitor" button, it took about ten seconds for video to appear on the monitor. When I then started playback, the video disappeared. Complete failure.
Print to Tape from Timeline I was able to print to tape from the timeline to the Maxtor unit, but not the Western Digital.
Print to Tape from Capture applet Once again, the Maxtor unit worked fine, and the Western Digital unit almost worked, but after about five seoncds, the video went blank, and then restarted about five seconds later, and then kept repeating this cycle.
My conclusion mirrors what I have been reading over the past few months, namely that Firewire drives can work perfectly well, but if you get the wrong one, it won't work at all, except for capture.
Only Sony will be able to tell us whether this is due to a flaw in Vegas, or is inherent in some flaw in the Firewire implementation in some drives. IMHO, if there is any way Sony can fix this on their end, they should do it, because Firewire drives are definitely here to stay, especially given the need to easily and quickly "bolt on" additional storage for video projects. Hot-swappable IDE drives are great but, since this and other test show, Firewire is perfectly capable of working, there needs to be some way to make it more general.
I did this on a Polywell 2.8 GHz P4. I connected my Sony TRV-11 and used it both for capture and playback to an external monitor. My Maxtor Firewire is a One-Touch model, and the Western Digital is a WD800.
I connected each on, in turn, to the same cable (i.e., only one drive was connected at one time, and they were not daisy-chained). I connected my Sony TRV-11 camcorder to the other port on my two-port Firewire card.
Capture
I was able to capture to either drive without any problems. No dropped frames.
Timeline playback
I was able to play back from the Vegas timeline, through my camcorder to an external monitor from the Maxtor. Everything worked exactly the same as playing back from an internal IDE hard drive. No problems.
From the Western Digital drive, however, when I clicked on the Vegas "Preview on External Monitor" button, it took about ten seconds for video to appear on the monitor. When I then started playback, the video disappeared. Complete failure.
Print to Tape from Timeline I was able to print to tape from the timeline to the Maxtor unit, but not the Western Digital.
Print to Tape from Capture applet Once again, the Maxtor unit worked fine, and the Western Digital unit almost worked, but after about five seoncds, the video went blank, and then restarted about five seconds later, and then kept repeating this cycle.
My conclusion mirrors what I have been reading over the past few months, namely that Firewire drives can work perfectly well, but if you get the wrong one, it won't work at all, except for capture.
Only Sony will be able to tell us whether this is due to a flaw in Vegas, or is inherent in some flaw in the Firewire implementation in some drives. IMHO, if there is any way Sony can fix this on their end, they should do it, because Firewire drives are definitely here to stay, especially given the need to easily and quickly "bolt on" additional storage for video projects. Hot-swappable IDE drives are great but, since this and other test show, Firewire is perfectly capable of working, there needs to be some way to make it more general.