Need advice on Pulsar1 vs. SCSI controller..
So, I have decided to get a SCSI controller and a SCSI-disk, but at the moment I have only one free PCI-slot, and that will be taken soon because of the PulsarII I have ordered (upgrade).
So I am wondering, would I be better off selling the Pulsar1, and getting a SCSI-controller+disk (the Pulsar would pay for it), or should I keep the Pulsar1 (together with a PulsarII and a Powersampler)?
OK, to simplify, what gives me better performance:
<b>Option A: (Keep it and wait)</b>
Keep Pulsar1 and wait several months to get SCSI.
I would have one PulsarII, a Powersampler, and a Pulsar1
Total of 13 DSP's and probably poorer PCI-performance because of the Pulsar1.
<b>Option B: (sell it and buy SCSI)</b>
Sell Pulsar1 and get a SCSI controller and a "small" 10K rpm SCSI disk for the money.
I would in this case have one PulsarII+Powersampler.
I would have a total of 9 DSP with better PCI-performance.
Whatever I choose, I will get a new mainboard asap, so I will be able to upgrade my CW-stuff later...
PS: My current system of 7 DSP actually suits my current needs, I rarely run into DSP overloads because I use mostly outboard gear.
I only use the STM 2448 mixer and effects/tools in the SFP enviroment.
So whatever I choose, I will have at least 2 more DSP's than I have now...
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: aMo on 2003-04-19 14:09 ]</font>
So I am wondering, would I be better off selling the Pulsar1, and getting a SCSI-controller+disk (the Pulsar would pay for it), or should I keep the Pulsar1 (together with a PulsarII and a Powersampler)?
OK, to simplify, what gives me better performance:
<b>Option A: (Keep it and wait)</b>
Keep Pulsar1 and wait several months to get SCSI.
I would have one PulsarII, a Powersampler, and a Pulsar1
Total of 13 DSP's and probably poorer PCI-performance because of the Pulsar1.
<b>Option B: (sell it and buy SCSI)</b>
Sell Pulsar1 and get a SCSI controller and a "small" 10K rpm SCSI disk for the money.
I would in this case have one PulsarII+Powersampler.
I would have a total of 9 DSP with better PCI-performance.
Whatever I choose, I will get a new mainboard asap, so I will be able to upgrade my CW-stuff later...
PS: My current system of 7 DSP actually suits my current needs, I rarely run into DSP overloads because I use mostly outboard gear.
I only use the STM 2448 mixer and effects/tools in the SFP enviroment.
So whatever I choose, I will have at least 2 more DSP's than I have now...
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: aMo on 2003-04-19 14:09 ]</font>
Well, I've always figured SCSI-drives to be more stable and reliable (correct me if I'm wrong here), so I would want it to be a sort of "What-I'm-working-on-right-now"-disk..
I know that IDE drives have become very much faster over the years (I remember the old days with a 540mb size limit too hehe), but I havent been totally convinced of their reliability..
I have two 40gb IDE drives now (5400rpm & 7200 rpm Seagate's), and every now and then I have a crash, and every time, there are lot's of errors (I managed to save my SFP-project last time by renaming a FILE0000.chk file to .pro).
Not that my system crashes THAT often though (and it's usually the 5400rpm drive that suffers)..
But I dunno.. I think at least I will use Option A (keep it and wait), and see what happens...
At the rate things are developing, maybe IDE drives will be 10K+ and rock solid by the time I can afford a SCSI controller/drive..
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: aMo on 2003-04-20 04:18 ]</font>
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: aMo on 2003-04-20 04:33 ]</font>
I know that IDE drives have become very much faster over the years (I remember the old days with a 540mb size limit too hehe), but I havent been totally convinced of their reliability..
I have two 40gb IDE drives now (5400rpm & 7200 rpm Seagate's), and every now and then I have a crash, and every time, there are lot's of errors (I managed to save my SFP-project last time by renaming a FILE0000.chk file to .pro).
Not that my system crashes THAT often though (and it's usually the 5400rpm drive that suffers)..
But I dunno.. I think at least I will use Option A (keep it and wait), and see what happens...
At the rate things are developing, maybe IDE drives will be 10K+ and rock solid by the time I can afford a SCSI controller/drive..
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: aMo on 2003-04-20 04:18 ]</font>
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: aMo on 2003-04-20 04:33 ]</font>
-
- Posts: 2310
- Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2001 4:00 pm
- Location: Canada/France
Yeah, i would think SATA is a better choice these days...
I was all scsi before, but now, my drives are IDE, but i keept the scsi controller for CD+CDRW+DVD, so i can have 4 drive (more than enough), + up to 14 other devices on scsi. I keep the scsi reliability for burning CD2CD and reading AKAI disks etc...
And since, when i'm recording i don't use cds, i keep my pci bandwidth intact.
Well, i guess i just have best of both world.
I have an adaptec 2940U2W + the ATA100 of my mobo.
Seriously, i think SCSI HD are overrated, personnaly, i would not go back to SCSI hd.
I was all scsi before, but now, my drives are IDE, but i keept the scsi controller for CD+CDRW+DVD, so i can have 4 drive (more than enough), + up to 14 other devices on scsi. I keep the scsi reliability for burning CD2CD and reading AKAI disks etc...
And since, when i'm recording i don't use cds, i keep my pci bandwidth intact.
Well, i guess i just have best of both world.
I have an adaptec 2940U2W + the ATA100 of my mobo.
Seriously, i think SCSI HD are overrated, personnaly, i would not go back to SCSI hd.
aMo, I think you're right regarding disk reliability. The old SCSIs were much better, but then also significantly slower.
The best and still most affordable way would be to have the complete (IDE) working disks duplicated by whatever interface available.
300 bucks for 2 Barracuda V is a joke compared to the old SCSI prices
cheers, tom
The best and still most affordable way would be to have the complete (IDE) working disks duplicated by whatever interface available.
300 bucks for 2 Barracuda V is a joke compared to the old SCSI prices

cheers, tom
So Seagate Barracuda's are good disks`?
If so I'm very happy, since my current "Audio"-disk is a Seagate Barracuda IV 7200rpm..
But, after having checked this out more and read your feedback here, I think I will get a mobo with both ATA/100/133 and S-ATA, so if I need a really fast disk, I can buy a S-ATA disk in the future..
(I will need a new mobo some day anyway, can't live with a MSI KM2M (VIA KM266 chipset) forever.. hehehe)
If so I'm very happy, since my current "Audio"-disk is a Seagate Barracuda IV 7200rpm..
But, after having checked this out more and read your feedback here, I think I will get a mobo with both ATA/100/133 and S-ATA, so if I need a really fast disk, I can buy a S-ATA disk in the future..
(I will need a new mobo some day anyway, can't live with a MSI KM2M (VIA KM266 chipset) forever.. hehehe)
On 2003-04-20 04:18, aMo wrote:
I have two 40gb IDE drives now (5400rpm & 7200 rpm Seagate's), and every now and then I have a crash, and every time, there are lot's of errors (I managed to save my SFP-project last time by renaming a FILE0000.chk file to .pro).
Not that my system crashes THAT often though (and it's usually the 5400rpm drive that suffers)..
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: aMo on 2003-04-20 04:18 ]</font>
<font size=-1>[ This Message was edited by: aMo on 2003-04-20 04:33 ]</font>
How do you know it's your hard drives causing the crashes? The only hard drive which will cause a crash is a faulty one (physically damaged), in which case the resolution would be to get a new hard drive, IDE or SCSI.
Are you sure your crashes aren't down to your motherboard or setup?
peace
-
- Posts: 2310
- Joined: Sun Mar 25, 2001 4:00 pm
- Location: Canada/France
my long time experience with HDs is with SCSI drives in Apple systems for about 15 years.
In the very early time there were some funny errors with drives (the mechanic index for track zero got loose if the drive was positioned too fast
due to some extra clever writer of driver software) but after that everything was totally reliable.
With IDE drives I have occasional problems, some contact, some with controllers, some surface issues - with SCSI I had none.
The drives may die immediately that's why I think a complete copy is the way to go.
But since the drives are so cheap one can live with that 'feature' easily.
cheers, Tom
In the very early time there were some funny errors with drives (the mechanic index for track zero got loose if the drive was positioned too fast

With IDE drives I have occasional problems, some contact, some with controllers, some surface issues - with SCSI I had none.
The drives may die immediately that's why I think a complete copy is the way to go.
But since the drives are so cheap one can live with that 'feature' easily.
cheers, Tom