I am aware the Pro Tools uses separate units to handle the load when you have many tracks at once on a PC. But is there any other way to beef up a nice audio PC to better handle a large multi track mix?
Also is there some sort of mathematical reference like 1 track requires X amount of memory?
Thanks for the great resource.
How big (how many MB) a track is depends on 1) bit depth, 2) sample rate 3) length of track. recording at 24/192 takes up way more space on an HD than recording at 16/44.1 and if that needs to be loaded into RAM clearly sucks up more memory
DSP cards (such as UAD) give additional processing power for specific VST effects
Cleaning your system so that only sytem necessary files are running in the background will mean that you have less calls on CPU and RAM and HDD for non audio applications when you are recording/mixing (For example turn off Anti virus, software firewalls, windows updaes, google updater, apple updater, print spoolers, etc,etc,etc). if you have a lot of unecessary backround services running it could impact audio performance
Setting your virtual memory minimum/maximum to the Same number (usually double the RAM. means your sytem isn't constantly resizing the page file. This can help if you are running low on RAM
Some of the key points to remeber are
CPU power is directly required to crunch numbers for VST/VSTi. The more you have running simultaneously the more CPU power you are going to need
Softsynths samples are generally preloaded into RAM so if you are running multiple softsynths simutaneously you need enough RAM
The number of tracks you can run at the same time is dependant on HDD read write speeds. Faster drives = more tracks you can record simultaneously
You need a setup that fits your situation. Tons of CPU power for live recording with no effects but a high track count (over 20 inputs for example)doesn't help you need more Drive speed.
4 Hard raided Velociraptors (lots of HDD speed and capacity) isn't helpful to Run 15 softsynths with 10 VST effects on each track you need CPU power and RAM for that