Scratch Disk on PhotoshopCC

Hi!
So I was drawing on Photoshop CC, and then, suddenly, a message pops up, saying that my ´scratch disk´ is full..?
Can anyone help me get more space in it?
Thanks <3

I don't know where FCP creates the scratch disk. You will probably need to use FCP to manage it. Check the documentation for FCP or use FCP Help from its Help menu. Otherwise post the question in the FCP forum.
Of course the genius you talked to may not have had a clue what he was talking about. Many don't.

Similar Messages

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  • "The scratch disks are write protected or unavailable" on NEW project on PrE

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  • Photoshop Scratch Disk Error OSX 10.7.5

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  • How can i make my external hard drive be the scratch disk with 1 FW input?!

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    This might be elementary, but is there a way to default the scratch disks in system settings to match the project that you are currently working on?
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  • Question about Photoshop scratch disk and specific setup

    Hi Folks
    Thanks for the help in advance.
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    priddye wrote:
    Just to clarify, if/when I get one 256gb SSD for my main C: drive, I can load the OS/Apps and store some data for the time being (until I get another SSD) and use the 2TB HDD for scratch disk only?
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    Sounds about right; with 512GB on tap you should be able to run just about everything from C:, as long as you don't keep your entire photo library on there.  Realistically, on a big system that's got a lot of apps installed and has been used for some time, Windows and your apps may end up consuming 100 to 150 GB, so that would still leave you a lot of breathing room.
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    By the way, SSDs stay in best working order if you overprovision - i.e., maintain a fair amount of free space.  The internal controllers need the free space to keep the data organized well and maintain top performance.
    -Noel

  • Internal hard drive for use as scratch disk

    Am running OS 10.4.11 on a dual core 2.3 Ghz PowerPC G5. Want to install a 2nd internal hard drive for use as a scratch disk w/ FCP and for my media files, etc. Given that I can only accomodate an SATA I drive w/ 150 Gbps transfer rate what might some decent choices be for a 500 Gb to 1 TB drive suited for video (and a PowerPC G5)? I'll also be adding an external drive for backup if anyone has any suggestions.

    Thanks for the recommendations. I had been looking at the Hitachi CinemaStar series but you have to reset the drive to SATA 1 for use w/ a G5 PowerMac. Resetting the drive, according to Hitachi, can only be done on a PC which I don't have access to. And I think that holds true for all their drives that are not strictly SATA 1.

  • CS2 not recognizing external hard drive as a scratch disk

    I have an external hard drive that I want to use as a scratch disk but while I can navigate to have Photoshop open files from the drive, when I go to my prefs and try and select it as a scratch disk, it's not listed as an option - i.e. Photoshop only shows "start up" and "Mac Hard Drive" as choices. But when I go in that same dialogue box, and look for an additional plug-ins folder, I can navigate to the external drive. It's also doing the same thing for a thumb drive I have and two other external hard drives which mount fine.
    I have restarted the program, removed the Prefs file, and restarted the program again but it still doesn't see any of the external hard drives.
    Any ideas?

    mike,
    Most drives are not optimized for Mac as purchased. Unless marked otherwise, consider that every drive you acquire, whether a fast-spinning hard drive or USB flash drive comes formatted as FAT so it can be recognized and used by both Macs and Windows machines. Use Disk Utility and reformat it as HFS+ "Mac OS Extended (Journaled)".
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  • Macbook Pro with Dual hard drives. Scratch Disk, Memory 64bit, Raid, Set Up Questions.

    Hello, this is my first post.
    I just upgraded from the original 2006 17" Macbook Pro to a refurbished 13" Macbook Pro 2.53GHZ 4GB Ram (2009 model).
    I bought the MCE Tech Optibay and installed it (if you dont know anything about it, ask me, its amazing.) So now I have 2x 500GB 7200RPM Seagate hard drives installed.
    I am running Snow Leopard, CS3, Lightroom 1.4.
    I have the main hard drive set up with Snow Leopard and all the Applications. I keep all my files on external firewire 800 drives, except files I am currently working on.
    The second hard drive is set up as a scratch disk for Photoshop CS3 and that is it.
    I am looking to upgrade to CS5 and Lightroom 3 here within this month or so. Or if I get anxious, tomorrow, haha.
    I want to know the best setup I can do with my current set up with CS3 and for my future setup with CS5.
    Any info will appreciated.
    -Would some kind of raid set up with my internal drives be better? How does raid work with scratch disks?
    -If I upgrade to 8GB memory in my macbook pro, would I even see a difference in performance if I didn't have a scratch disk? Since CS5 and Snow Leopard can use more memory in 64bit.
    I think thats all I have on my brain right now. I may have more questions, or I can guarantee I will have more later.
    Thanks alot.

    First the scratch. Like you said, most everyone has a different take on scratch discs but I'd guess you're wasting one heck of a lot of hard drive space using all 500 GB for Scratch, did I read that right? If I did read it correctly YES, partition it and get some use out of it!!
    I've got a unibody MBP 2.93GHz, OS 10.5.8, CS3 & PS 5 (running in 32bit mode), and 8 gigs of ram. I've partitioned the one 300 GB drive so 50GB is scratch, the other partition is for OS, & Apps, and documents (images).
    I use LR 2 first than export to PS 5 to finish up. My photos get to be 300MB to 500MB in size and both versions of PS work on this setup just fine. Using PS 5 in 64 bit mode is faster opening files but NON of my plugin's are 64 bit yet, that's why I'm still stuck in 32 bit mode.
    Not knowing what size or kind of files you work on makes giving advice a bit tough but try setting the status indicator (don't know the right name for it) in the bottom left corner of any PS open file to "Efficiency" and watch what happens when you process your files. I rarely see mine drop below 90%, I've got the usable RAM in PS Prefs set to it's max suggested, cut way back on History and Cache.
    Can't wait for NIK and others to offer their plugin in 64 bit, later this year is what I was told.
    There used to be an old "rule of thumb" with old version of PS about Scratch disc size. I don't remember exactly but it may have been 3 to 5 times the size of your biggest file??
    Good luck, Alan

  • Weird RAM/Scratch Disk issue

    Having a weird memory problem with Photoshop CS4 on my G5 Quad.
    Let me see if I can explain this properly....
    When I open up a file in Photoshop, I notice that the available space on my hard drive reduces (info at the bottom of any Finder window). Essentially, it's using the scratch disk.
    I would expect this with a very large file that exeeds the amount of ram in the machine. But it does it even with files of 5-10 Mb. It appears to me (just a guess) that Photoshop isn't using RAM when opening or manipulating a file. Though I have more than enough to open it.
    Even when I close the file, or "purge all" from PS's edit menu, my available disk space does not come back. Only when I quit out of Photoshop completely, will it come back.
    Make sense?
    No other application seems to be having this issue. Any ideas on what might be causing this?
    I've run Apples Disk Utility, and everything came out fine. Ran TechTool Deluxe, and no problems there either. Hoping maybe I'm just missing some piece of the puzzle first, before I uninstall/reinstall Photoshop.
    System specs:
    G5 Quad (2.5 GHz)
    4 GB RAM
    OSX 10.5.8
    Photoshop CS4 (11.0.1)
    Memory usage set to allow up to 70% (but doesn't seem to matter what I set it to)

    This is normal.
    Photoshop needs to allocate scratch space for data, in case it needs to write that data to disk later -- otherwise you would randomly fail with "out of scratch space" in the MIDDLE of an operation.
    Photoshop is using RAM, but needs to allocate the scratch space, and make sure the allocation succeeded.
    And yes, RAM and scratch space get reused, so rarely decrease.
    Other applications that deal with datasets larger than RAM will have the same issues.
    And technically your OS swapfiles do the same things.

  • Need advice on my new Scratch disk

    I just received my new Seagate 750 gig external drive.
    What should I know before hooking it up to my MacBook and use it with FCE?
    Do I need to format it?

    It did take a few seconds. Thanks!
    And I set the scratch disk to the new drive.
    On my macbook pro there is only one FW400 Firewire plug receptacle. On the Seagate there are 2. Can I use one for the camera and the other, obviously to connect it to the mac?
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  • When I try to use the internal hard drive as a scratch disk I get this error "unable to set scratch disk- the selected directory is on write protect or non-writable media.  Any ideas on how to fix this.  It only happens in fcp.

    When I try to use the internal hard drive as a scratch disk I get this error "unable to set scratch disk- the selected directory is on write protect or non-writable media.  Any ideas on how to fix this.  It only happens in fcp.

    By internal, I assume you're referring to your systems (boot) drive. Is it, by chance, a partitioned dive?
    Also…although many people successfully use their systems drives as scratch disks, over time you'll have better results using a dedicated drive for your media.
    Good luck.
    Russ

  • Where am I able to find my CS5 scratch disk?

    When I open a "new" project to create a logo, or whatever, It tells me that I am unable to do so cause my scratch disk is full.  As well, it will NOT allow me to specify a back up scratch on my external hard drive for whatever reason (probably cause it's USB 2.0), it doesn't even show as being listed when I go to choose the scratch.  Anyfrickingways, at this point, I'm just fed up, so what I'm wondering is this...  Where and how can I find my scratch disk so that I can delete some files?  I'm a newb, so any advice would be sincerely appreciated.  Thank you.
    D-Bag.

    D-Bag, the default scratch disk is the drive that your OS is on.

  • Save as Photoshop PDF Scratch disk locked?

    I searched  the forums, but apparently my issue only crops up when someone tries to launch PS. I can launch and do everything else just fine; however, I attempted to save as > PDF and received the scratch disk locked message. I can successfully save as PDF if I use the launch as admin option, but this seems odd since I can do everything else just fine without the need to do that.
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    Select Yes for "Preserve Photoshop Editing Capabilities" in the prompt.
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    I have tried the CTRL + Shift + Alt method of launching to wipe my preferences only to have the same result. My scratch disk is an internal drive used only as storage with 1.30 TB available.
    Photoshop CS6 Extended
    Windows 7 64bit
    User account is an admin, but I have never had a need to launch PS as an admin specifically.
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    Checked my permissions on C:\Users\***\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\Adobe PDF\Settings and everything is fine.
    Taking that info and some google work I came across this: http://help.adobe.com/en_US/photoshop/cs/using/WS23B45D06-1977-4006-8BEB-2DBB08CA502Ea.htm l#WSA79FA899-BC95-401e-BD44-5B26BC31B369
    Apparently, there should be PDF settings files in C:\Users\***\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\Adobe PDF\Settings; however, my folder was empty, but the article above also says to move them from an 'Extras' folder located within ProgramData. Copied the settings over, tried again, same result.
    Am I supposed to have Acrobat installed for this to work properly? I don't have Acrobat, nor do I even use Reader (I use a different program for in-browser PDF).
    //edit
    Apparently it was in my settings on the PDF save dialog. I removed the settings that I moved over and tried again. This time I actually fiddled with the settings and used Smallest File Size instead of HQ Print, and that seemed to have worked. Messed with things some more, and narrowed it down to the Preserve Photoshop Editing Capabilities option. As long as that option is UN-checked, then everything works smoothly, including HQ quality.

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