HERE'S A BREAKDOWN OF MY PROBLEM, ANY HELP WOULD BE APPRECIATED:
I recently made the switch from pc to mac. I was running my pc based around a 002/Glpyh GT050 firewire drive. I was able to transfer, playback and record from the drive with no problems.
Now I set-up my mac and plugged in the drive. It automatically shows up on the desktop with no problems. For some strange reason I am only able to copy files from the drive to my mac. I cant transfer from the mac to the drive or delete existing files off of the drive itself. In the window for the drive I'm only given the options of 1. Get Info 2. Eject: External Drive 3. Show view options
THATS THE FIRST PROBLEM. .
SECOND PROBLEM:
When I open a session in pro tools from the drive a message pops up saying the following:
30 Audio files are on volumes unsuitable from playback. Would you like to copy them to a suitable volume? What the hell is this? I thought these drives are supposed to work fine with all pro tools systems? How do I fix this problem?
I even tried going to Windows>Show Work Space. .In that window the drive is set on T for Audio, when I try to change it I get the following message: "External Drive" cannot be designated as an Audio Record volume because it is not a valid audio volume.
SOMEONE PLEASE HELP. .THANKS.
Comments
Sounds like a permissions problem, because the drive was origina
Sounds like a permissions problem, because the drive was originally windows format, the OS think it doesn't have permission to write to the drive.
Hi-light the drive, get info, permissions, change the permissions to read-write. You may be asked for the administrative password.
Then go to the disk utility in the utilities folder repair permissions on your system disk, then check the external for file errors.
You should be good to go.
8)
If you want the best performance definitely reformat the drive a
If you want the best performance definitely reformat the drive as HFS+ with the apple disc utility. Also disable journalling as this greatly affects performance. Disable journalling on your system drive as well.
I had a problem once transferring from PC formatted drives with a mpeg file. While I could transfer the file from the drive it would not play, yet if we transferred it to the drive via ethernet from the same hardrive it would work. Something to do with missing resource forks I was told. Good luck.
the problem you're experiencing is because mac os 10.3 is not ye
the problem you're experiencing is because mac os 10.3 is not yet able to write to NTFS formatted drives (although it can read from them)... as suggested either re-format as HFS+ journaled if you will be using the drive exclusively with macs. if you need to exchange sessions or data with PCs than I would format (using Apple Disk Utility) as MS-DOS format, which is actually FAT32.
Windows XP btw will not allow you to format as FAT32 any bigger than 32GB, by design, to force people to use NTFS. NTFS is inherently better if you are going to be using a large drive such as the Glyph exclusively with the Windows NT kernel (NT, XP and up). But for Mac-PC interchange I have found FAT32 to be better.
I believe the main downside to FAT32 is there is a maximum file size of 2GB for any single file - although I am not totally sure about this.
Anyway if the drive is only for mac use, as others have said go with HFS+ journaled - definitely the safest best.
oh, and hello btw - my first post here!
charlie
edit: sorry, the other guys are right - DISABLE journaling for best audio performance with HFS+
Hey guys.... you all seem to really know about this, and I'm in
Hey guys.... you all seem to really know about this, and I'm in dire need of some help... I'm using Protools on a G4 laptop and i'm getting the same 'volumes unsuitable for playback' popup which has more or less stuffed me right up a gum tree....
what have i done?
if anyone could enlighten me as to a)what this means b) how to fix it, and c) how to avoid it happening again, i'd be hugely grateful
many thanks
anna x
Check the drives properties. It may be set to read-only if so ch
Check the drives properties. It may be set to read-only if so change it to read-write.
If the drive is formatted as fat32 you may have to re-format it as HFS+
Obviously, back-up all the files to another drive BEFORE re-formatting the Glyph.
Hope this helps,
Chris