What external hard drive for recording?
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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Michael Haselman
- Posts: 1308
- Joined: 23 Aug 2002 12:01 am
- Location: St. Paul
What external hard drive for recording?
I'm about to start doing some recording in earnest. I'd like about an 80GB external drive dedicated to recording. I went on E-bay and was overwhelmed. What do I need to make sure it has/needs to do? I know it's a USB connection.
Mullen RP D10, Peavey NV112, Hilton volume. Hound Dog reso. Piles of other stuff.
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John Macy
- Posts: 4327
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Rockport TX/Denver CO
We use the drives put together by Pacific Pro Audio at our studios...
http://www.pacificproaudio.com/
They use Seagate drives (the best) in a Firewire/USB combo case that uses the correct chip set for fastest audio transfers. The also run very cool with no fan noise, and priced very fairly. I have a dozen of them and have had zero problems...
http://www.pacificproaudio.com/
They use Seagate drives (the best) in a Firewire/USB combo case that uses the correct chip set for fastest audio transfers. The also run very cool with no fan noise, and priced very fairly. I have a dozen of them and have had zero problems...
John Macy
Rockport, TX
Engineer/Producer/Steel Guitar
Rockport, TX
Engineer/Producer/Steel Guitar
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Michael Haselman
- Posts: 1308
- Joined: 23 Aug 2002 12:01 am
- Location: St. Paul
Thanks, John. I guess I need to know what not to buy also. This is not going to be used for anything except my personal recordings, so I don't need state of the art stuff. I just saw so many different kinds on Ebay with different prices, that I don't want to get something then find out later it won't work for my application. Standard PC, with USB.
Mullen RP D10, Peavey NV112, Hilton volume. Hound Dog reso. Piles of other stuff.
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Chris Tarrow
- Posts: 477
- Joined: 27 Mar 2006 1:01 am
- Location: Maplewood, NJ
+1 for the Pacific Pro Audio Drives, they are great.
Be aware you won't be able to record and play back over USB, are you sure your machine doesn't have a firewire port?
Your other alternative is to install a second internal hard drive that's dedicated to recording, if you're relatively handy it's very easy and cheaper than an external drive.
Be aware you won't be able to record and play back over USB, are you sure your machine doesn't have a firewire port?
Your other alternative is to install a second internal hard drive that's dedicated to recording, if you're relatively handy it's very easy and cheaper than an external drive.
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Michael Haselman
- Posts: 1308
- Joined: 23 Aug 2002 12:01 am
- Location: St. Paul
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Chris Tarrow
- Posts: 477
- Joined: 27 Mar 2006 1:01 am
- Location: Maplewood, NJ
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John Macy
- Posts: 4327
- Joined: 4 Aug 1998 11:00 pm
- Location: Rockport TX/Denver CO
Ditto for what Chris said--be sure it's a 7200RPM drive and make sure it's a Seagate
...I buy a lot of internal drives from www.newegg.com...
John Macy
Rockport, TX
Engineer/Producer/Steel Guitar
Rockport, TX
Engineer/Producer/Steel Guitar
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Justin Douglas
- Posts: 188
- Joined: 11 Jul 2003 12:01 am
- Location: Austin, TX
i'm a professional freelance audio engineer by day (and a steel playing super-villain by night). brand-wise, LaCie is the only thing i'll buy in external hard-drive land as it's the only brand that after 100's of albums and films has never faulted on myself of any of my colleagues.
firewire is great, but USB 2.0 is terrific as well. dell's online store is selling external drives for pretty cheap these days. it astounds me how cheap disc space has gotten in the last 5 years!
cheers and good luck!
firewire is great, but USB 2.0 is terrific as well. dell's online store is selling external drives for pretty cheap these days. it astounds me how cheap disc space has gotten in the last 5 years!
cheers and good luck!
