![]() Might cost a little more than over the counter product, but it's well worth it. WD Black have been performing very well so that's a safe choice. My recommendation: buy a nice enclosure (OWC or such) and install the hard drive you have selected in it. Choose a Thunderbolt or Firewire800 drive, and be sure to read specs - the box needs to have 7200rpm (or faster) drive in it, if it has a 5400rpm or a "green" drive, it will have problems. And that too cannot be too close to capacity.ĭo not buy USB drives even though they are the cheapest. That's why dedicated audio drive is recommended. When that happens, Protools gets confused. Disk Cache came to Pro Tools Vanilla in version 12.2, which makes the likelihood of getting 9073 errors on any Pro Tools system later than v12.2 much less likely. As soon as your hard drive is full enough, or has too much work to do, it cannot read data fast enough. Pro Tools HD users have had Disk Cache since Pro Tools 10, which enabled Pro Tools to load some, or all of the session and media into your RAM, making 9073 errors history. They have heads that read data beneath them but nowhere else. We will assume the user already has Pro Tools installed and the program is running. Seriously, hard drives are devices that spin around. ![]() If I should be using an external hard drive to playback or record then why did I never see this error message when running far more heavy projects on PT10? ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |