Problems during capture with VS10+
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- Ken Berry
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joselan320
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sjj1805
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Just a suggestion regarding your external hard drive issue.
I know that quite a few forum members are able to use external USB or Firewire hard drives - such as Black Lab has stated above.
I can only speak from my own experience and found that when I connected external hard drives, during heavy data transfer they would lose their connection with the PC. I tried two different external drives and connected with USB and also Firewire with the same resuilts.
What I use are hard drive caddies. This will overcome the problems mentioned by Ron (Vidoman) where you dont have mounting brackets inside your PC to install extra hard drives.
Hard drive caddies fit in the slots at the front of your computer - just like your DVD burner. The hard drive fits into a case which slides into the caddy. The caddy is connected to the computers IDE slots so what you have are standard internal hard drives - but quickly removeable. You turn the computer off, pull the hard drive carrier out of the caddy and then slide in another hard drive.
Because you are using standard internal hard drives you do not get the problems associated with the transfer of large amounts of data. You can also build up a collection of hard drives in a drawer that can be used to back up video and data. You can even install alternative operating systems on these removable hard drives. It is like having several computers - but all sharing the one case.
I know that quite a few forum members are able to use external USB or Firewire hard drives - such as Black Lab has stated above.
I can only speak from my own experience and found that when I connected external hard drives, during heavy data transfer they would lose their connection with the PC. I tried two different external drives and connected with USB and also Firewire with the same resuilts.
What I use are hard drive caddies. This will overcome the problems mentioned by Ron (Vidoman) where you dont have mounting brackets inside your PC to install extra hard drives.
Hard drive caddies fit in the slots at the front of your computer - just like your DVD burner. The hard drive fits into a case which slides into the caddy. The caddy is connected to the computers IDE slots so what you have are standard internal hard drives - but quickly removeable. You turn the computer off, pull the hard drive carrier out of the caddy and then slide in another hard drive.
Because you are using standard internal hard drives you do not get the problems associated with the transfer of large amounts of data. You can also build up a collection of hard drives in a drawer that can be used to back up video and data. You can even install alternative operating systems on these removable hard drives. It is like having several computers - but all sharing the one case.
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joselan320
