Good morning,
For the moment, I have a latest generation i7 PC configuration with 64 gigabytes of RAM.
Will this configuration be sufficient or would it be better to invest directly in a latest generation i9 configuration and 128 gigabytes of RAM?
As an internal SSD for sound banks, I was thinking of taking this type of SSD.
4 TB Lexar NQ790 M.2 NVME 2280 R/W 7000/6000 MB/s
Is it a good choice or do you have a better choice for an efficient, fast and reliable SSD for installing orchestral sound banks?
I don't really want to be limited at a given moment in the composition because of a computer that is not efficient enough for orchestral music.
Thank you in advance for your responses and opinions.
Choice of PC i7 or i9 / 64 or 128 gigabytes of RAM for orchestral sound banks
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- KVRian
- 890 posts since 9 May, 2005
FWIW, There's no meaningful response others can give to this question.
All dependent on your particular projects.
If the current 14700k CPU isn't enough, your options are a 14900k or 9950x (Core Ultra 9 isn't available yet).
You need enough RAM to run your largest projects (to avoid hitting the VM-Swapfile in lieu of enough physical RAM - which kills performance).
If your current projects are pushing close to using 64GB RAM, it would be a good idea to move to 128GB.
If not, adding additional unused RAM will result in no performance increase.
Most of our clients who are professional TV/Film composers are running i9 CPUs with 128GB RAM.
These folks are typically running large scoring templates... where they want immediate access to a huge pallet of sounds.
Let your Projects/Work determine the tools you need.
If you need more machine, you'll know.
All dependent on your particular projects.
If the current 14700k CPU isn't enough, your options are a 14900k or 9950x (Core Ultra 9 isn't available yet).
You need enough RAM to run your largest projects (to avoid hitting the VM-Swapfile in lieu of enough physical RAM - which kills performance).
If your current projects are pushing close to using 64GB RAM, it would be a good idea to move to 128GB.
If not, adding additional unused RAM will result in no performance increase.
Most of our clients who are professional TV/Film composers are running i9 CPUs with 128GB RAM.
These folks are typically running large scoring templates... where they want immediate access to a huge pallet of sounds.
Let your Projects/Work determine the tools you need.
If you need more machine, you'll know.
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FranklyFlawless FranklyFlawless https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=586325
- KVRian
- 1091 posts since 24 Oct, 2022
Sufficient regardless of motherboard chipset and DDR4/DDR5 support, unless your projects are becoming extremely resource-intensive (80%+ utilization).Trancer wrote: Mon Oct 28, 2024 12:22 pm Will this configuration be sufficient or would it be better to invest directly in a latest generation i9 configuration and 128 gigabytes of RAM?
It is fine. When considering an NVMe PCie 4.0 SSD, focus on opportunistic sales relative to your budget, then capacity. I highly suggest waiting for Black Friday in this case.Trancer wrote: Mon Oct 28, 2024 12:22 pm As an internal SSD for sound banks, I was thinking of taking this type of SSD.
4 TB Lexar NQ790 M.2 NVME 2280 R/W 7000/6000 MB/s
Is it a good choice or do you have a better choice for an efficient, fast and reliable SSD for installing orchestral sound banks?
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- KVRAF
- 1599 posts since 19 Aug, 2009
From what I have seen, AMD CPUs are much better (and cooler/silent too).