Jonathan Bland
February 21st, 2009, 12:43 AM
Hi Folks,
Can someone please tell me how much drive space I would need to hold 40 hours of 1080 footage from the EX1?
I'm looking at these for storage and backup:
LaCie | 500GB Rugged All-Terrain Triple Interface | 301371 | B&H (http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/558882-REG/LaCie_301371_500GB_Rugged_All_Terrain_Triple.html#includes)
2 week shoot in the Himalayas.
Big thanks :)
Nick Wilson
February 21st, 2009, 01:06 AM
16 GB gives slightly over 50 minutes, so for 40 hours you will need around 760 GB.
Jonathan Bland
February 21st, 2009, 01:38 AM
Well done Nick :)
My mind always aches when I have to crunch the numbers.
Anyone have any thoughts on the Lacie Rugged Drives?
David Issko
February 21st, 2009, 01:46 AM
Hi Folks,
Can someone please tell me how much drive space I would need to hold 40 hours of 1080 footage from the EX1?
I'm looking at these for storage and backup:
LaCie | 500GB Rugged All-Terrain Triple Interface | 301371 | B&H (http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/558882-REG/LaCie_301371_500GB_Rugged_All_Terrain_Triple.html#includes)
2 week shoot in the Himalayas.
Big thanks :)
Take 2 with you together with a laptop that is SxS compatible. Worked for me whilst I shot a doco in Israel over Dec/Jan. Very light weight and bus powered (at least from my MacBook Pro & FW800) Backed all the data up to both drives via XDCAM EX Clip Browser every night.
After my arrival home, I again transferred the files (from one of my Ruggeds) to 2 internal drives (2 additional copies again) in my Mac Pro.
Editing of doco going great.
Best wishes for your adventure.
Jonathan Bland
February 21st, 2009, 02:37 AM
Sounds great David.
Big thanks and best wishes for your film :)
David Cheok
February 21st, 2009, 03:46 AM
Its called a NEXTO 2725 + SBAC-US10 + 12V battery
Google it.
Ben Westaway
February 23rd, 2009, 12:06 PM
I have found the ruggeds to be the perfect drive to backup to on shoots - bus powered, big capacity for their size, and most important of all - reliable.
No major insight really - just giving credit where its due.
Dean Sensui
February 23rd, 2009, 02:57 PM
Most of all, be sure to put the data on two drives. If you assume that one will fail, and always make a backup, you'll be OK.