IDE or SCSI?

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Johnny916

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Yes I am going to a buy a new computer. I want a built a home recording studio with it. What kind of hard drive should I get with it though? Of course I want to get a fast SCSI hard drive but that's very expensive. Is buying a SCSI hard drive necissary for professional quality recording?
Or should I just go with the cheaper kind of hard drives, which is IDE or something like..
 
SCSI is overall, better. But new IDE drives have reached the point now where they are quite functional in a recording application. If SCSI is out of your budget, get IDE, just make sure it's 7200RPM ATA/66. The Quantum KA/KX's and IBM Deskstars are good drives.

Emeric


[This message has been edited by Emeric (edited 01-13-2000).]
 
I would only consider SCSI if I was a professional and truely needed that extra performance.

ATA/66 is really the best bang for the buck these days, falling right in the middle of today's typical SCSI speeds of 40 and 80MB/sec....at a fraction of the cost.

I recently purchased a 9GB SCSI drive for my work server at a price in the $300 range. In that case SCSI was truely needed. But for that cost I could have purchased almost two 20GB 7200RPM Ultra ATA drives for my home machine.

Recording requires a lot of space and a lot of speed. As EIDE continue to decrease in price and increase in speed...it's really a great way to go for the home studio; and in many cases even the semi-pro to professional studio I'd imagine.

To go the ATA/66 route you'll need a machine with an ATA/66 controller, preferably on the motherboard, and the latest greatest chipset (e.g. Intel's i840) to really see the benefits. Plugging a 7200RPM drive into a standard EIDE controller isn't the correct solution.

Many mobo manufacturers today offer ATA controllers right on the motherboard. Check out www.abit-usa.com

As Emeric mentioned, Quantum makes a really nice drive. Avoid Western Digital like the plague. I've also been noticing that Maxtor is making real cheap 7200RPM drives...about $129 for a 13GB. Seagate also has great prices at times. I've used both Seagate and Maxtor drives in the past and was satisfied with both...and am currently using Quantum.

Slackmaster 2000
 
There's a lot of bull around about SCSI. Things have changed dramatically over the last few years.

A 20Gig IDE Maxtor 5120 UDMA sustains 20MB/Sec. That'll set you back about $365. Try and do THAT with SCSI. You'll need a ATA 66 and a modern mobo like the ABits etc.

And it'll let you run lots of tracks with effects, some in real time, on a fast PC.
 
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