Setup Guide

003 Family Setup Guide160
Seek Times on Partitioned Drives
Seek times are actually faster on partitioned 
drives (assuming that reads and writes are per-
formed on a single partition), since the heads 
only have to seek within the partition bound-
aries, rather than the whole capacity of the 
drive.
Smaller partitions perform faster than larger par-
titions, but this comes at the expense of contig-
uous storage space. When you partition a drive, 
you will need to find the compromise that best 
suits your performance and storage require-
ments. 
Defragmenting an Audio Drive
Mac Systems
When working with larger files (such as video), 
you can limit fragmentation by backing up your 
important files to another disk, erasing the files 
from the original hard disk, then copying the 
files back, instead of doing a defragmentation.
Window Systems
Periodically defragment audio drives to maintain 
system performance. 
For maximum recording and playback effi-
ciency, data should be written to your hard 
drive in a contiguous fashion—minimizing the 
seek requirements to play back the data. Unfor-
tunately, your computer can’t always store the 
sound files in this way and must write to disk 
wherever it can find space.
In multitrack recording, audio tracks are written 
in discrete files, spaced evenly across the disk. 
While fragmentation of individual files may be 
zero, the tracks may be far enough apart that 
playback will still be very seek-intensive. Also, 
the remaining free space on the disk will be dis-
contiguous, increasing the likelihood of file 
fragmentation on subsequent record passes.
Increased fragmentation increases the chance of 
disk errors, which can interfere with playback of 
audio, and result in performance errors.
Optimizing (Defragmenting) Drives
To prevent fragmentation, you can optimize 
your drive, which rearranges your files into a 
contiguous format. Most optimizing software 
lets you run a check on a drive to find out the 
percentage of fragmentation. If your drive 
shows moderate to heavy fragmentation, you 
should consider optimizing it.
If you use your system for intensive editing, or if 
you frequently delete audio or fade files from 
your hard drive, you may need to optimize your 
drives on a weekly basis, or even every few days, 
since it doesn’t take long for even a large hard 
drive to become fragmented.
Backing Up Data Before Optimizing
Since your files will be rewritten by the optimi-
zation process, always make a backup copy of 
the data on your hard drive before you optimize 
it. You should also use a hard drive utility to find 
and repair any problems before optimizing data 
or re-initializing your drives. If there is any dam-
age to your hard drive's directories prior to opti-
mizing, serious data loss may result.
Avoid distributing audio files within a ses-
sion over different partitions on the same 
drive since this will adversely affect drive 
performance.
On Windows, to avoid fragmentation, for-
mat drives with higher cluster sizes (such as 
32K).










