Lightroom and solid state hard disks

I'm looking to speed up Lightroom as much as possible within reason (version 3 on a Mac) and one possibility that occurred to me is to put Lightroom and it's catalog on a somewhat smaller 80-120 GB (and therefore less expensive) solid state hard disk. I'm wondering if Lightroom interacts with the system enough that I wouldn't gain much? I would think that I would get a pretty good speed bump...

Pete Marshall says:
SSD's are great for the OS and apps. They may not be so good for the catalog itself as write speeds are not good. If I was you I would get a small SSD to use as the boot drive and put the catalog and files on seprate fast traditional hard drives.
Write and read speed of currently available SSDs blow away hard disk drives in any configuration. Look here:
http://www.harddrivebenchmark.net/high_end_drives.html
SSDs are more expensive per GB than HDDs, but you don't need a large 1TB+ drive to increase system performance! I work with Intel who is one of the top SSD manufacturers and R&D companies. Intel is working with Micron on joint program to reduce cost of SSDs. Intel just announced their new SSD 510 series:
Intel SSD 510 Specification
SATA 6Gb/s Sustained Bandwidth Performance
(Iometer* Queue Depth 32)
— 250 GB:
Sequential Read: Up to 500 MB/s
Sequential Write: Up to 315 MB/s
— 120 GB:
Sequential Read: Up to 450 MB/s
Sequential Write: Up to 210 MB/s
Compared to a high performance HDD:
WD Caviar Black
Samsung HD103UJ
HDTach
Burst (MB/s)
232.6
204.5
Random Access (ms)
12.1
13.7
Average Read (MB/s)
89.5
96.8
Average Write (MB/s)
79.9
84.4
I have no experience running LR on SSD, but putting your LR catalog, RAW cache, and preview files on an SSD should provide a real performance boost.

Similar Messages

  • My X301 with solid state Hard disk lost all data

    Hello all people, excuse my poor english i try to explain my problem.
    1.- I have a Lenovo x301 (type 2776-TMU) with a 128 Gygabites solid state hard disk (Samsung MMCQE28G8MUP-0VAL1)
    2-The sympton is: Lost all data of the hard disk and apears 0 partitions and 0 bytes used.
    3.- I run all type of diagnostics and all  pass OK.
    4. I restore windows,aplications etc.  and all work fine, but in any random time, the hard disk lost all info and another time apear 0 Partition and 0 bytes used.
    5. I try to install, bios, firmware or any update of the lenovo web, and no resolve my problem.
    6.- In a last chance install via dvd a fresh instalation  with oem windows 7, and present the same sympton of point 4.
    7.- I change parameters on the bios setup of the SATA interface (ochi or compatible) with the identical result of the 4 point.
    How you understand, i have a big problem and desesperate, but i not sure if my hard disk is of the problem, or the mother board, any firmware, etc.
    Any have idea in how attack o determine exactly the origen of my problem?
    Thanks and regards all people.
    atn, Miguel Angel Borbolla Bonomi
    Moderator note; e-mail address removed to stop the spambots getting it

    Sounds like a faulty SSD. Return for warranty repair/replacement.
    T61p, T400
    formerly x23, x40

  • Which Solid State Hard Disk for Satellite Pro L670?

    I have a Satellite Pro L670 which I want to configure for presentation purposes and have to re-load the operating system anyway.
    Rather than over-write the existing disk, I thought it would be better to get a second one to fit instead.
    Replacing the current (old-fashioned) spinning disk with a solid state one seems to me the best way to go.
    Has anyone else fitted a solid state hard disk to a Satellite Pro?
    For budget reasons I am planning to go for a 120GB capacity which will be enough.
    However I have yet to find out from Toshiba what they might recommend. Anyone else yet gone this route?

    Hi
    Theoretically any SATA SSD drive should be compatible because the notebook supports an SATA controller.
    But in some cases it could be possible that an SSD drive would not be handled properly. In such cases the SDD drive manufacturers provides different firmware updates
    So before purchasing an SSD drive check the support pages of SSD drive manufacturers for further details maybe an firmware update would be available

  • I am buying a new macbook pro but i want to fit my own ram memory and solid state hard drive , will apple permit this without voiding the waranty.

    i am buying a new macbook pro but i want to fit my own ram memory and solid state hard drive , will apple permit this without voiding the waranty.

    yes you can do it and not void the warranty.  Those are the only hardware changes that Apple permits.  Instructions on how to upgrade the ram and remove and replace the hard drive are even included in the owners manuals for MacBook Pros.

  • ITunes and Solid State (System) Disks - SSD's

    I suspect there are very few of you out there (if any) that own a SSD that you are using as a System Disk. The reason I mention this is that all the lower cost MLC versions of the products have been found to have problems with writing many small records in a short space of time and in some cases cause an effect called stuttering (simply Google "stutter ssd"). I have discovered that iTunes is hurt severely by this problem to the extent that often the system will freeze for 30 seconds to a minute during syncs or downloads. One of the manufacturers has a work-around but for the moment it's probably wise to sit back and wait for the next generation products to appear on the market before reaching into your pocket.
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    Pete Marshall says:
    SSD's are great for the OS and apps. They may not be so good for the catalog itself as write speeds are not good. If I was you I would get a small SSD to use as the boot drive and put the catalog and files on seprate fast traditional hard drives.
    Write and read speed of currently available SSDs blow away hard disk drives in any configuration. Look here:
    http://www.harddrivebenchmark.net/high_end_drives.html
    SSDs are more expensive per GB than HDDs, but you don't need a large 1TB+ drive to increase system performance! I work with Intel who is one of the top SSD manufacturers and R&D companies. Intel is working with Micron on joint program to reduce cost of SSDs. Intel just announced their new SSD 510 series:
    Intel SSD 510 Specification
    SATA 6Gb/s Sustained Bandwidth Performance
    (Iometer* Queue Depth 32)
    — 250 GB:
    Sequential Read: Up to 500 MB/s
    Sequential Write: Up to 315 MB/s
    — 120 GB:
    Sequential Read: Up to 450 MB/s
    Sequential Write: Up to 210 MB/s
    Compared to a high performance HDD:
    WD Caviar Black
    Samsung HD103UJ
    HDTach
    Burst (MB/s)
    232.6
    204.5
    Random Access (ms)
    12.1
    13.7
    Average Read (MB/s)
    89.5
    96.8
    Average Write (MB/s)
    79.9
    84.4
    I have no experience running LR on SSD, but putting your LR catalog, RAW cache, and preview files on an SSD should provide a real performance boost.

  • I am replacing my existing SATA hard drive to a Solid State hard drive and want to image the drive, is this possible?

    I am replacing my existing 320 GB SATA hard drive that clicks and makes weird noises to a Solid State hard drive and want to image the drive, is this possible?  I then want to replace the DVD with a secondary large drive for storage.
    So I am looking for any "gotchas" that I may be unaware of.
    Thanks!

    Put the Old drive in an external notebook drive enclosure. Install the SSD in your computer. Boot from your Old drive's Recovery HD:
    Boot to the Recovery HD:
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND and R keys until the menu screen appears. Alternatively, restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    Clone Lion/Mountain Lion using Restore Option of Disk Utility
         1. Select Disk Utility from the main menu then press the Continue
             button.
         2. Select the destination volume from the left side list.
         3. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
         4. Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it
             to the Destination entry field.
         5. Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to
             the Source entry field.
         6. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Destination means the New SSD. Source means the external Old hard drive.
    Set the new Startup Disk to the SSD and restart the computer.
    This process clones both your old OS X volume and the Recovery HD volume to the SSD. You can use a similar process to clone the SSD to the new hard drive you will install.

  • Hello everyone. I have recently installed a Samsung SSD (solid state hard drive) into my destop PC. For some reason Lightroom does not see it ? So i cannot ingest photos from it, or copy photos from a card to it. It is not listed as a drive option. LR see

    hello everyone. I have recently installed a Samsung SSD (solid state hard drive) into my destop PC. For some reason Lightroom does not see it ? So i cannot ingest photos from it, or copy photos from a card to it. It is not listed as a drive option. LR sees every other drive. My computer sees it fine, so i was able to create a catalogue there. Im running windows 8.1. Any ideas ? I will also add that this drive became corrupt and was repaired by Samsung. Maybe they didn't do a very good job.. ..

    Yes pretty much that, but to clarify sorry
    Opened Lightroom.
    Create new catalogue.
    This opened the Windows 8 file explorer window and Windows recognises the drive. So I was able to create a catalogue there and save.
    I then inserted my memory card into my card reader which LR recognised. I selected it, chose all the photos within and then navigated to the right side of the Lr import dialogue window to locate this problem drive as on this occasion i want the RAW files on the same drive as the lrcat. However all my other drives are listed but not this Samsung SSD.
    In addition this Samsung SSD is not listed a drive to import from in the same dialogue window.

  • Disk Drive Full. Whats the best way to transfer operating system to larger non solid state hard drive .

    Heres the Lowdown,
    I have a Desktop that has a 250 G Solid state hard drive , and a secondary 750 G Hard drive.
    My OS is installed on the solid state , and also a lot of my audio software which needs to also be on the same disk drive as the operating system ;
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    I've backed up all files to an airport drive ( I'm a bit paranoid about losing vital info) .
    Is there a way to reinstall the OS onto the second larger drive and just transfer the remaining software across
    Will I have to reinstall all previous versions of software if I do this?
    Will The processing slow down if the OS is run on the Standard drive rather than the Solid State drive ?
    Last time I tried to clear some space on the OS drive I accidentally deleted vital information, so I wanna make sure I do this properly.
    Any advice would be much appreciated.

    Carbon Copy Cloner (1 Month Demo with full capabilities).  Because CCC also has the ability to transfer your Recovery Partition
    SuperDuper (Free for a full clone).  Recovery partition will not be transferred
    Applications -> Utilities -> Disk Utility -> Restore (from SSD to 750 hard disk).  Recovery partition will not be transferred.
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  • I just put a solid state hard drive in my mac book pro and used super duper to copy the hard drive and move the data over to thew new ssd, but most of my music isn't in iTunes when I turned it on? How do I get my music to show up in my new drive?

    I just put a solid state hard drive in my mac book pro and used super duper to copy the hard drive and move the data over to thew new ssd, but most of my music isn't in iTunes when I turned it on? How do I get my music to show up in my new drive?

    Many thanks lllaass,
    The Touch Copy third party software for PC's is the way to go it seems and although the demo is free, if you have over 100 songs then it costs £15 to buy the software which seems not a lot to pay for peace of mind. and restoring your iTunes library back to how it was.
    Cheers
    http://www.wideanglesoftware.com/touchcopy/index.php?gclid=CODH8dK46bsCFUbKtAod8 VcAQg

  • My Mac Book Pro has just had a new memory and solid state drive installed. After the installation, the Lightroom tools all became grey. There is no longer any color on the screen other than my picture. Even the color sliders are grey.  Can you please help

    My MacBook Pro just had a new memory and solid state drive installed. Since the installation, the Lightroom tools are now all grey. Even the color sliders are grey. Please help!

    My guess is that your operating system got updated to Mavericks and that you are running an old version of Lightroom:
    Sliders are white, look different | Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks
    Be aware of a Lightroom bug with color management in mavericks that makes shadows too deep in the Develop module: Jao's photo blog: Serious color management bug in Mac OS 10.9 "Mavericks" and Jao's photo blog: Further quantification of the Mavericks color management problem.

  • Solid State Hard Drive Replacement For HP ENVY TouchSmart 15-j053cl?

    Hello there,
    I want to swap out my current 1TB harddrive from my year-and-a-half old HP ENVY with a 500 GB solid state harddrive that I just purchased from Amazon.
    Two questions:
    1) Is this solid state harddrive compatiable with my computer (specs below)?
    2) I want to reinstall windows onto the solid state harddrive after I install it (assuming its compatable).  How can I go about putting Windows 8 on a bootable usb drive to do this?  The computer does not have an optical drive and I don't have an external optical drive, so installing Windows via bootable usb is my only option.  
    I'm aware I can "clone" my PC onto the external harddrive if I wish, but I'd rather do a clean install if I can.
    Computer Specs:
    HP ENVY TouchSmart 15-j053cl
    Product: E0K05UA#ABA
    Solid State Hard Drive Specs:
    Samsung 850 EVO 500GB 2.5-Inch SATA III Internal SSD (MZ-75E500B/AM)
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00OBRE5UE/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 
    Please let me know any advice you may have.  Also, please feel free to ask any questions - hopefully I provided enough details.

    Windows 8.1 has a built-in tool to make a recovery usb drive:
    http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-8/create-usb-recovery-drive
    The HP Backup and Recovery app can also do it. This is a factory clean install image and any data and programs you have added will be lost. If you have an external hard drive you can also do a backup with Windows File History. Then, add the backed up files to the factory install. You can also use File History to make a system image type backup and restore it to the new drive using a repair disk but this is virtually the same as a clone, which you said you do not want.
    Manual
    Your service manual linked above. See page 47.
    The Evo 850 is the best SSD on the market in my humble opinion and will work just fine for you.
    If this is "the Answer" please click "Accept as Solution" to help others find it.

  • Putting in new solid state hard drive

    I'm trying to instal a new solid state hard drive into my Pavilion p-6. I ordered the re-installation disks from HP. The new solid state hard drive is smaller than the original drive. When I put in disk#1 the disk promt tells me the new hard drive is smaller than the original and it will not continue the process. HOW CAN I OVER RIDE THIS? And make this work?

    Hi,
    The information that I had last received from HP internal indicates that a 160 GB SSD would be the minimum size required before the HP external recovery media will work.
    HP DV9700, t9300, Nvidia 8600, 4GB, Crucial C300 128GB SSD
    HP Photosmart Premium C309G, HP Photosmart 6520
    HP Touchpad, HP Chromebook 11
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    Custom i7-4790k,Z-97, 16GB, Vertex 3 SSD, Plextor M.2 SSD, Samsung EVO SSD, Corsair HX650, GTX 660TI
    Windows 7/8 UEFI/Legacy mode, MBR/GPT

  • T400s solid state hard drive already full

    I have a newly-purchased t400s with a 120gb solid state hard drive.  The drive is already almost full, and I have only uploaded about 35gb of data from my old computer.  How is this possible?  Are there specific programs that are eating up my storage space?  Thanks.
    Moderator edit: Added detail to subject.

    Is it a Lenovo-provided installation or your own clean install?
    How long have you had it?  is it doing those ridiculous R&R automatic backups to itself?
    What's the partitioning layout shown in disk management?  Service partition?  Recovery partition?
    From the above you can tell I have no idea what's going on...
    Z.
    The large print: please read the Community Participation Rules before posting. Include as much information as possible: model, machine type, operating system, and a descriptive subject line. Do not include personal information: serial number, telephone number, email address, etc.  The fine print: I do not work for, nor do I speak for Lenovo. Unsolicited private messages will be ignored. ... GeezBlog
    English Community   Deutsche Community   Comunidad en Español   Русскоязычное Сообщество

  • Recounting My Successful Experience Upgrading My Solid State Hard Drive

    I just successfully upgraded my solid state hard drive from
    60 gigabytes to 256 ; the machine is a Lenovo T400s - while the upgrade is
    still fairly fresh, I thought I’d share my experience – maybe someone else will
    benefit – most of what I’m about to relay was provided by Zoltanthegypsy and
    GMAC-R60 – I thank them again for their advice - but I will try to add some
    additional thoughts based on my experience – for the most part I was able to
    use the tools provided by Lenovo – my original hard drive had 3 partitions, S
    (system), C ( windows + my programs & data), & Q ( Lenovo stuff like
    backup and restore, the factory copy, etc.) :
    Create a “factory state” copy of the machine to
    DVD or CD soon after purchase – I say soon after purchase because it appears that
    a minimum amount of hard disk space is required – my 60 gig was almost full and
    I got a message that there wasn’t enough space – I can still make the copy but
    I’ll have to move some things off temporarily – this step isn’t really related
    to the upgrade but it is a good idea –  Start/Lenovo ThinkVantage Tools and you’ll see
    the option – and as Zoltanthegypsy has pointed out you will most likely not be
    able to do this from the new hard drive after the restore operation covered
    below – I haven’t proven this out but I do know that my Q space on the new
    drive is smaller than before – something was lost and it’s most likely the
    factory state – and so keep the old hard drive long enough to make that factory
    state copy to DVD or CD.
    The next step was a full backup to a Lenovo
    external hard drive – it came with one partition - the external that I got from
    Lenovo has a small keypad and is password enabled – this fact will come into
    play further on – as GMAC-R60 noted a pop-up will appear giving the option to
    create rescue media – you want to select this option so that the external will be
    bootable.
    When the backup is complete you want to swap hard
    drives making sure to first unplug & remove the battery .
    There may be other ways to do this next step but
    here’s what I did – I powered on the machine and let it go through what
    appeared to be a BIOS routine – note that my external was attached to the
    laptop but it wasn’t activated by keying in the password – after the BIOS
    routine was finished I activated the external by typing in the password and then
    did a Control/Alt/Delete – the machine restarted and booted from the external –
    with hindsight I probably could have connected & activated the external
    before powering on but the instructions that came with the external suggested
    something different which didn’t work for me .
    I was now able to go into rescue and recovery
    and do a complete restore to the new drive – but to my surprise the extra space
    that I bought with the new drive ended up all in the Q partition – and Windows
    Disk Management didn’t enable me to reallocate the space to C.
    And so I purchased Disk Director 11 Home by
    Acronis – a $50.00 investment in a tool that I’ll probably never use again but
    I’m now able to use an $800 solid state drive rather than trying to recoup some
    money via Ebay -– within minutes I was able to reclaim the space and I now have
    enough C space to last the lifetime of the laptop – especially since all
    pictures go on a stick & my demographic isn’t into video games .
    One useful piece of information that I got from
    a user on the Acronis forum was that all of the Lenovo tools like rescue and
    recovery, etc. are available for download from the Lenovo website – and so if worse
    came to worse I could have deleted that Q partition, stretched C using Windows
    Disk Management , and then downloaded the Lenovo tools into C.
    One thing I’d like to learn to do would be to
    perform all the steps outlined above but without using the Lenovo tools – using
    Windows 7 tools instead but not having a Windows CD , i.e. how do you boot

    It went something like this:
    (On the stock drive)
    Plugged in a blank USB HDD, and a blank USB flash drive.
    - HDD formatted in NTFS, flash drive in FAT16.
    Ran the recovery media creator.
    - Created bootable media on flash drive, and put the recovery image on the HDD.
    Once done, shutdown, removed the battery, swapped the drive for a 500GB Scorpio Black (freshly NTFS quick-formatted). USB HDD and flash drive were still attached.
    Booted, and used F12 to select the flash drive for booting.
    It booted into the Windows Recovery Environment and I chose the Lenovo restore factory image option at the bottom of the list.
    From there on out, I just clicked through the wizard, and it restored.
    Upon finishing, I unplugged all of the external media, and had it restart. It then booted into OOBE as expected.
    W520: i7-2720QM, Q2000M at 1080/688/1376, 21GB RAM, 500GB + 750GB HDD, FHD screen
    X61T: L7500, 3GB RAM, 500GB HDD, XGA screen, Ultrabase
    Y3P: 5Y70, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, QHD+ screen

  • Solid-state hard drive questions....

    Hi, I'm going to get a new Macbook Pro soon to replace my archaic 17" wobbley screened Powerbook and I'm having some dilemmas about picking the hard drive. So heres a few solid-state questions I was hoping you could answer:
    How much faster is solid state than disk (disc?), for example I run Flash and Photoshop alot. If a go for 8gb of ram and 3.somthing processor, will there be a noticeable difference in the speed of these apps opening/running if the hard drive is solid state?
    and...
    If I go for normal hard disk now, is it possible to upgrade the hard drive at a later date (doing it myself or through Apple) to a solid one?
    It's an extra 600 quid that I could be spending on crisps, so is it worth the money?

    While I can't comment on the speed I can comment on changing the internal drive. In short it's a 10-15 minute process. My recommendation would be to start with a traditional HD and see if it's performance is adequate before considering an upgrade. If not as mentioned the upgrade is extremely easy. In fact here is a video that shows it.

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