The whole recording rig is not complete just yet. I am still waiting on two A/D converter cards for the front end gear. It is about 90% complete though.
As far as the computer, I built it myself. For years my hobby has been building and repairing computers. My two sons and I have become deeply drawn into building “hotrod” computers just to out-do each other. Just like in drag racing, we have studied and experimented with tons of high performance parts and pushed most of them to their limits. Between the three of us, we have probably blown enough money on computer parts to put them both through college. And all in the name of just having fun. I am also a veteran musician and sound engineer.
When it came time to build my music rig, I focused mostly on what I’ve learned about stability. Having a system that crashes and/or misbehaves while clients are sitting there has got to be embarrassing as well as bad for business. Being mobile means that it must also be tough and withstand somewhat harsh conditions. It won’t always be sitting in a nice clean air conditioned studio. I’ll take it to bars and rehearsal rooms to make live demos for local bands.
Recording a high number of tracks means I need speed and power too. Laptops are most portable but lack performance because of the way they are designed. Laptop CPUs, memory, and drives are all designed to be lighter, run on lower power, and create less heat. This translates into a lot less muscle and speed when compared to desktops with the same ratings.
I used a full size rack mount PC case. When complete, my whole rig will be contained in two rack mount road cases complete with wheels and handles. It will accommodate any type of input signal and be comprised of power conditioners, isolated mic splitters, 24 hardware mic pres with inserted dynamics, and two recording machines, one for 2 track and one for 24 track.
I took my time and carefully thought out each component. I tried to determine what areas I could skimp in and what areas I could not. I finally settled on the following components:
Epox 8RDA3+ mobo with 400fsb and nForce2 chipset
AMD 3200+/400mhz “Barton” core
1GB Geil Golden Dragon dual channel DDR433 (no heat sinks needed)
WD360GD 10,000rpm Raptor w/8mb cache
WD800JB 7200rpm w/8mb cache
Liteon DVD+/-RW
The award winning PC Power and Cooling, Silencer 360 ATX
All silent cooling fans and HD coolers, less than 20dB.
It is turning out to be one sweet rig. I may consider selling recording rigs like this as a complete package deal some day. I could make them a lot cheaper by reducing them to 16 or even 8 channels.
What do you think?