I go into 2 electronic stores today and i see whole range of exterantl USB hard drives but not even one with firewire connection... Can i use USB to capture video??
USB 2 has a faster maximum speed than Firewire, but Firewire is usually better for sustained speeds. Also, USB2 uses up CPU whilst Firewire does not, and Firewire can be daisy chained, whilst USB cannot.
So, not really a change for the better, though as stated USB2 drives will capture DV and HDV ok.
You're right. Most externals are now USB only. It's cheaper for the manufacturers to make, and there isn't a big demand for Firewire. Not everyone is out there making movies like us.
While USB will be fine for most editing situations, it is CPU intensive, while Firewire isn't.
Newegg.com is where I've bought several firewire+usb hard drive enclosures. They have listed 93 such enclosures. I've bought several AMS VENUS DS-2316CBK 3.5" USB + IEEE1394 External Enclosure
Hi Groooovy! Might I share this most EXCELLENT link creator? Makes life amongst the VegHeads here a breeze - especially as you took the time to track down this F/W stuff? Yeah?
LaCie makes a truly reliable Firewire 800 device. Yep, 800.
I'm with vicmilt re: eSATA or SATA docking from Wiebetech (mini SATA dock, $75), but for those who do not have a place to plug SATA in, LaCie makes the next best thing - cheap multi-port Firewire 800.
Weibetech's firewire 800 cards *probably* work (I can only vouch for LaCie), but you'll notice that LaCie cost less and comes with 3x800 ports, not 2x800 + 1x400.
had nothign btu probelms with windows and firewire drives..
countless MBR's have been wiped requireing data recovery which takes stupid amounts of hours.
Absolutely NOT happy with firewire management though windows whatsoever.
I thought SP2 alleviated this issue, but today, while rendering on my laptop, lo and behold, the extrnal firewire dirve ends up with a nuked MBR...
recovery is easy, but time consuming
since using USB2, im yet to have a problem
Its not as fast in the longterm, but at least the bastard works..
Pretty muc the same here, around 10 drives in caddies that go into a firewire external enclosure and IDE dock, no problems but we do shut everything down before disconnecting anything.
Re eSATA.
Even if your PC doesn't have a eSATA port you can buy a very cheap connector thing that'll turn any SATA port into an eSATA port, the only difference is the physical connector / shield / ground connection.
Definately the way to go and yes an eSATA drive is the same speed as the drive would be inside the box, there's no electronics involved.
And I believe Apple are ditching the Firewire 800 port on the Intel laptops which is a bummer, I'd hoped 1394b would become more popular.
And a word of caution. ALMOST every 1394a device works happily on my 1394b ports but not everything so it pays to still have a 1394a port available.
after using over 14 external drives to produce over 21 DVDs this past two years, my findings are:
a) they're usually crap for realtime video editing
b) especially don't buy maxtors, ever ever
c) use external drives solely for backing stuff up, not for production work
d) best solution is to get 4 400-gig internal IDE seagate drives and use those
(they're only $159 now at newegg.com)
also, I just bought an extra IDE controller card (thx guys for the idea) and will try installing that, so I can put even more HDs in my main pc.
I've got a huge Lian Lee case w/5 fans and a large power supply, so that'll take care of heat/power issues.
I do this full time for a living, editing/producing videos. Stay away from externals, except for backing up files.
This knowledge came at a high price, in terms of failed maxtor external drives, lost production time, and figuring out what works. Just get a bunch of big internal seagate IDE drives, they're great. And a lot less expensive.