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I just watched a couple of videos on the Aruba and it requires more tweaking than i care to do. ChatGPT suggested i use one of these. Easy, cheap, no real setup to transfer from computer to computer. https://plugable.com/products/usb3-t...RbOQaxbg0S8yD7 |
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If you'd like to pursue the Aruba S2500 route (which is the best price/performance ratio.) Here is a guide, the same one I would follow: https://forums.serverbuilds.net/t/of...oe-10gsfp/5038 -If you can follow directions it's probably not too difficult. *edit* I just reviewed the guide, I think you can get it set up. I believe in you. |
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I missed this reply! Yeah that looks like a great solution! looks simple! go for it! |
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Luckily the Firewire Card i have that has been working all this time came with a low profile adapter as the "Transfer PC" is a smaller case. I will be swapping out the HD to an SSD drive and giving it 16 gig of ram as well. If this works like i hope it does, i will be in great shape. Thanks for all the advice on this. Its helped me get to a solution that will hopefully work for my needs. |
Absolutely, I'm glad I can help. Report back and let us know how the solution works out. I haven't looked for a device like that in over 15 years and at the time they did not exist (at least that I could find.) So that's really cool. USB 3.0 speeds are up to 5 Gigabit, so about 640MBps.
Let us know how it works out!:congrats: *edit* Oh one thing to note! If the motherboarf does not take an NVME drive on the motherboard, you can get an nvme to pci-e adapter (maybe under $10 for a simple one.) -That way you're not stuck with SATA SSD Speeds, and you can saturate your connection speed properly. |
Also, when searching for hardware, I highly suggest https://pcpartpicker.com/ -I trust most of the brands they aggregate, and you can use it to find the best price for an NVME drive or ram (for example $15 for a 128gb NVME drive) -they also have in-house test results for many of the drives so you can check real-life speeds, not manufacturer claims.
They have so many useful filters, you can surely find what you want for a good price if you can figure out how to work it well. It's good for every piece in a build, it's very useful if you try the build feature as well. As it can check compatibility with your hardware. |
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I appreciate the advice! I have captured many a video this way using old school spinny drives. So SSD drives will be fine for capture. My new machine will be loaded down with m.2 drives! So editing and rendering will be super fast. |
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