I was reading some older posts (see end of message) about building a new system and now I have a question about the kind of motherboard I want and hard drive configurations.
My current (and "ancient") motherboard has 2 IDE channels. I have my OS drive and my 2nd drive on channel 1, and my CD and DVD-burner on channel 2. I also have an external firewire drive. I *thought* that having both hard drives on the same channel would be best....is that still true?
More importantly, in selecting a new motherboard, should I pick one with 2 IDE channels, 4 IDE channels (do they still have those?) or one with a combination of IDE and SATA?
My intuition is to buy a combo, put my OS drive on the SATA, my 2nd hard drive I use for video capture on an IDE channel 1, and my Cd and DVD drives on channel 2.
Assuming I did this, when it comes time to render, do I render FROM the 2nd hard drive back to itself,.....OR to the OS drive on the SATA, ....OR to the firewire drive.....or does it not matter as far as efficiency? (with my current system, and after lots of tests, I found I needed to put the music on the OS drive, the photos for my video montage on the 2nd drive, and render to the external drive, otherwise the audio would not render correctly)
Mike
http://mediasoftware.sonypictures.com/forums/ShowMessage.asp?MessageID=183304&Page=0
Eighth, more, relatively smaller hard drives. It's nice to have the latest, biggest drives, but the price per storage sweet spot is just not there - you pay a premium. Smaller drives (80 - 120) give you a lot of options with audio and video, going from one drive to another (& one channel to another) is much faster, and it's pretty easy to add storage at any time as prices come down in the future (USB2 &/or firewire enclosures for the replaced drives - the ones you pul out - are cheap). I mention this with a new system because opting for better/more IDE support now on the motherboard makes a difference - IDE pci cards can be slower, plus take up a valuable slot. And remember, your system HD will limit (or can limit) the speed of another HD installed as a slave on that channel - another reason for a motherboard with 4 channel IDE, as you're much more likely to upgrade the other drives then swap your OS to a newer one.
My current (and "ancient") motherboard has 2 IDE channels. I have my OS drive and my 2nd drive on channel 1, and my CD and DVD-burner on channel 2. I also have an external firewire drive. I *thought* that having both hard drives on the same channel would be best....is that still true?
More importantly, in selecting a new motherboard, should I pick one with 2 IDE channels, 4 IDE channels (do they still have those?) or one with a combination of IDE and SATA?
My intuition is to buy a combo, put my OS drive on the SATA, my 2nd hard drive I use for video capture on an IDE channel 1, and my Cd and DVD drives on channel 2.
Assuming I did this, when it comes time to render, do I render FROM the 2nd hard drive back to itself,.....OR to the OS drive on the SATA, ....OR to the firewire drive.....or does it not matter as far as efficiency? (with my current system, and after lots of tests, I found I needed to put the music on the OS drive, the photos for my video montage on the 2nd drive, and render to the external drive, otherwise the audio would not render correctly)
Mike
http://mediasoftware.sonypictures.com/forums/ShowMessage.asp?MessageID=183304&Page=0
Eighth, more, relatively smaller hard drives. It's nice to have the latest, biggest drives, but the price per storage sweet spot is just not there - you pay a premium. Smaller drives (80 - 120) give you a lot of options with audio and video, going from one drive to another (& one channel to another) is much faster, and it's pretty easy to add storage at any time as prices come down in the future (USB2 &/or firewire enclosures for the replaced drives - the ones you pul out - are cheap). I mention this with a new system because opting for better/more IDE support now on the motherboard makes a difference - IDE pci cards can be slower, plus take up a valuable slot. And remember, your system HD will limit (or can limit) the speed of another HD installed as a slave on that channel - another reason for a motherboard with 4 channel IDE, as you're much more likely to upgrade the other drives then swap your OS to a newer one.