Determining your hard disk storage options, Working with scratch disks and hard disk drives, Data rates and storage devices – Apple Final Cut Pro 7 User Manual

Page 219

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This chapter covers the following:

Working with Scratch Disks and Hard Disk Drives

(p. 219)

Data Rates and Storage Devices

(p. 219)

Determining How Much Space You Need

(p. 221)

Choosing a Hard Disk

(p. 223)

Types of Hard Disk Drives

(p. 224)

To make the most of your Final Cut Pro editing system, you need to make appropriate
choices about hard disk selection and maintenance.

Working with Scratch Disks and Hard Disk Drives

By default, Final Cut Pro uses the hard disk on which the application is installed as your
scratch disk to store captured and render files. Ideally, you should use a hard disk other
than your main system disk as your scratch disk. Depending on how much space you
need for your media, you can have up to 12 scratch disks in your Final Cut Pro editing
system.

Important:

If you have multiple hard disks and partitions, make sure they do not have

similar names, or you could encounter problems during capture. For more information,
see

“Using Multiple Hard Disks.”

Data Rates and Storage Devices

The data rate of the video you capture depends on the format of the source video and
the codec you use for capture. If you are capturing low data rate video, chances are you
can use more inexpensive storage devices. If you need to capture extremely high data
rate video, you may need a faster hard disk. Here are some examples of data rates for
common capture formats:

Typical data rate

Format

Varies between 300 and 500 KB/sec.

OfflineRT (using Photo JPEG)

219

Determining Your Hard Disk
Storage Options

13

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