

Again, I expect this market to grow quickly in the next few months. OWC has just announced internal 4-NVMe PCIe storage and for some time Sonnet has offered a PCIe card to which NVMe’s can be added.
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My interim plan would be to use the solid state media as working storage and back up to spinning drives, spinning them up weekly yet still aware of the risks. And I suspect it could work for a large percentage of users. Within the next year, I anticipate that we will begin to see 4TB NVMe media and at that point 16TB of media will be more than enough for just about any project I’ll be doing. That convinces me that I need to start migrating to solid state media.
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Connected via TB3 to my MacBook Pro Retina, I’m seeing read and write speeds of around 1800 MB/s using Blackmagic’s Disk Speed Test. Using SoftRaid, I’ve configured an 8TB RAID 0. I currently have for testing an OWC Thunderbolt 3 NVMe enclosure populated with 4 of their 2TB NVMe media. The $2300 Promise MPX module may configure to 24GB in RAID 5 and would be faster than even an externally connected Thunderbolt 3 RAID, but I simply want to phase spinning drives out of my life. Storage has been giving me some sleepless nights. One less external box on the equipment rack. I currently have a Decklink Studio 12G in an external OWC enclosure and that card will now be installed in an 8x PCIe slot. Benchmarking videos I’ve watched haven’t convinced me that for my purposes it is a sound investment. That combination of CPU, RAM and GPU will still handle ProRes RAW adequately. The $2000 Afterburner card holds little interest. My Mac Pro 2013 has 1TB internal solid state storage which with the junk I’ve accumulated over the years is about 65% full. While I know it always would be possible to add another GPU, I’m thinking that the Dual Radeon is the best bet knowing that can be changed in the future and still leaving one MPX slot open for what will no doubt be additional MPX module options over the coming months. To economize, I’ll buy my memory from OWC, adding another 64GB of RAM to bring machine to 96GB. The delta to 24 cores is a steep one and I’m reckoning that difference could better be spent elsewhere. What's the best value configuration for a 2019 Mac Pro? Image: Apple So here goes.įrom user experiences, I’ve concluded that 16 core is the sweet spot both in terms of price and performance relative to Apple’s other pro contender, the iMac Pro. Other than needing the apex of Mac technology for my reviews and analysis, my focus is a system that will easily optimize DaVinci Resolve 4K editing and grading still photo editing and grading in Lightroom, Luminar and Capture One fast encoding for deliverables and finally- several years of service with the possibility of machine upgrades rather than machine retirement. That alone tells me it’s time for a new machine. Fortunately, I will not need to revisit deliverables already delivered. I am still recovering from that and lost about 8 months of footage being used for product reviews and testing. It scrambled the internal SSD, the backup spinning drive connected via a Drive Dock and trashed a 32tb G Tech RAID 5.
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It shut itself down two months ago in the middle of a software installation (and not power because it is connected to a UPS and we have a 20kwh whole house generator). I was fortunate in that I was never bitten by the dual D700 rendering bug but of late it has been running very hot. I’ve not bought a desktop machine since my December 2013 Mac Pro trash can. So here are some thoughts and of course I welcome suggestions, comments and critiques before I hit the add to cart button. It’s not if a spinning drive will die, it’s when. Like the blogger who discussed the Promise Pegasus MPX module raid and observed that it would be highly unlikely one would need to access the unit to replace a drive. Like all of you interested in Apple’s new beast, I’ve been watching videos from studio pros, bloggers, take-it-apart sites and even the uninformed seeking to inform. I am working on configuring my Mac Pro 2019 in anticipation of some (sorely needed) funding arriving in January, 2020.Īnd yes, I’ll post my observations once my system is in place along with the obligatory unboxing video, which I promise to make as uninspiring as every other unboxing video. What are the best options if you want a machine that will do the business, won't become obsolete quickly, but offers the best bang for the buck? The new Mac Pro is available with a large number of configuration options.
