Hi all,
A year ago, I began to upgrade a Mac Pro 2010 for the purpose of eventually using it as a VSL VE Pro slave, with an iMac as the main DAW. Currently I have four 7200 rpm SATA drives in the computer. The BlackMagic speed test is not terribly impressive on these HD drives. The weak link with this Mac is the USB 2.0 and Firewrite outputs—SLOW. I did buy a SATA PCIe card. So, the machine is still capable as a standalone VSL workstation, or with VE Pro. I use both the Mac Pro and iMac for a ton of all kinds of work., including music, video, and "work" work, not just music. The iMac is also capable but with limited internal storage.
Been too busy and havent't done much with this project, but I am again looking at my options. First thought—upgrade the internal HDs to SSD of the Mac Pro 2010 for use as a slave for VSL and other libraries—inking to VE Pro. SSDs are the major expense here.
Then an "a ha" moment ...
Instead of using a computer as an external VE Pro slave, can I use an external Thunderbolt (1 or 2) drive enclosure (4 bays) with either standard HDs or SSDs connected to the principal iMac DAW? Does the Mac Pro slave or external-drive bay make more sense for VSL library sample loading and workflow?
How would you vote on the following?
MAC PRO 2010 as VE Pro Slave; Mac OS on one of the drives configured as: (1) four 7200 HDs; (2) four SSDs; (3) two HDs plus 2 SSDs, or ...
IMac as master DAW, with OS and apps on internal drive connected to (4) external 4-drive bay with Thunderbolt 1 or 2; (5) either all 7200 HDs or SSDs or mixed; (6) flexibility of using two HDs for production, and two SSDs for VSL libraries; and (7) flexibility of daisy chaining additional Thunderbolt drives for produciton, backup, and streaming other libraries. ADVANTAGE: smaller, more portable, doesn't require second computer.
Of course, RAIDing any of these options would work but do I need to RAID for sample-library loading of VSL?
Make sense? Which solution would you use? OWC is one vendor who makes the drive enclosures and the SSDs. Angelbird & Samsung also for SSDs.
Thanks, everyone.
John