-
FCP File Organization
I do understand the need to put media files on a disk, or RAID, separate from the system disk – and I’m very familiar with the fact that most people recommend putting project files (FCP program/Photoshop graphics/Soundtrack files etc.) in a “project” folder on the system disk, and FCP media files (captured video, render files, etc) on a second “media” disk or RAID.
However – just to clarify:
Once you have created final Photoshop, music and other such files that are to be imported and composited in the video – shouldn’t these completed “media files” also be saved on the separate “Media Disk” – not just those files contained in FCPs Capture Scratch/ Render folder, etc. – especially if you want to get as much realtime playback without rendering?Even with a three disk set up (the system disk for applications only, a second internal SATA disk dedicated to Project files, and a 2 x 500Mb LaCie Firewire 800 RAID for the FCP Scratch disk) I’ve found that if I save composed audio files and multilayered PSD files to this second internal SATA disk (which is pretty darn fast) and then import them into FCP from there, I’m far more likely to get dropped frames in complex, multi-layered sequences than if I put the same files directly on the RAID (and I would think that this would be compounded even more if the files were on a slower system disk).
Could I get some other experiences/opinions on this – and on the best place to save final Photoshop, Soundtrack files, etc?
Thank you, so much.
Apple G5 PowerMac Dual 2.5 w/2.5 Gb RAM