Digital Video - January 2009 - (Page 19K) Sonnet Technologies | Fusion F2 SIZE MATTERS SONNET’S F2 PORTABLE RAID IS A MINI SOLUTION TO A MAJOR PROBLEM. BY NED SOLTZ The blurred line between a desktop and a portable editing system just got a little more blurry. Sonnet Technologies has released the Fusion F2 640GB portable hard drive, a storage solution aimed specifically at MacBook Pro editors who are working with large amounts of data where medium-rate throughputs are required. In a package about 6" square and less than 3⁄4" high, the F2 delivers two eSATA drives that interface to the MacBook Pro via an Express34 eSATA card. But what is most ingenious about this device is that it draws its power from the MacBook Pro’s FireWire 400 port. The drive enclosure contains two 320GB 2.5" drives from Western Digital. One might object that the WD drives are 5400 rather than the faster 7200 rpm drives. It is important to note, however, that speed is only one factor. The density of the WD drive actually makes these drives faster than a Hitachi 7200 rpm drive. I tested a pair of Hitachi drives striped in RAID 0 and found that the striped WD drives were 10MB/s faster! For those who might not be aware, the difference between four-pin and sixpin FireWire connectors is that those two extra pins carry power. Thus, with a supplied FireWire 400 cable, Sonnet has solved the problem of eSATA connections not carrying power and the need for a cumbersome external power supply. But, you might ask, what if you need to use the remaining FireWire ports? First of all, if you need to connect a FW400 device, it is as simple as using an FW400-800 adapter. But what’s most significant here is that all the F2 is drawing is power from that FireWire port. That is vital for the product that this drive compliments: The Io HD. The Io HD from AJA Video Systems allows field capture of HD material with a real-time transcode to Apple ProRes 422 or ProRes 422 HQ via the computer’s The F2 drive set up with a Mac Book Pro and AJA Io HD ADVERTORIAL FireWire 800 port. The Io HD consumes the entire bandwidth of the FW bus and thus no other devices can be connected to the Mac simultaneously. Fusion F2 is only drawing power and not transferring data. Thus, Io HD and Fusion F2 work perfectly together. Sonnet sells a separate eSATA controller (under $100) that connects to the two ports on the F2 unit. Note that this unit is not port-multiplied. Port multiplication does reduce throughput by up to 10 percent, as well as adds bulk owing to the additional controller board. Sonnet has opted for speed and a compact footprint over single-port solution. Supplied accessories include two eSATA cables, a padded slipcase and a FireWire 400-to-miniplug power cable. The drives are formatted in MacOS Extended format, and the user must then utilize Apple Disk Utility to set up a RAID, if desired. If working in DV or DVCPRO HD where a single drive is more than adequate, you might opt to set up a mirrored RAID 1 for redundant backup. If you desire more layers of real time or wish to work in Apple ProRes 422 HQ, I would strongly recommend setting up a RAID 0 and then backing up critical data according to your usual backup strategy. (You do have a backup strategy, I hope). I opted to test the unit in a RAID 0 configuration. I first applied the AJA System Test using a DVCPRO HD sample. Read-write speeds were 114.7 MB/s while read speeds were 114.3 MB/s. This falls well within the tolerance required for ProRes 422 HQ but just short of the 125MB/s (or so) throughput that would comfortably allow editing of 8bit uncompressed HD. In all fairness, there really is no two-drive RAID that could edit uncompressed footage. I put this drive through its paces in Final Cut Pro 6 on a MacBook Pro Core 2 Duo 2.33GHz with 2GB of RAM. Installation merely required installing the driver software for the Express34 controller card and launching Disk Utility and configuring the RAID level. It indeed performs as advertised with the Io HD and does not interfere with the FireWire transfer that the Io HD performs. In prior tests with single drive eSATA solutions, I could capture and edit ProRes 422 without a hitch. ProRes 422 HQ, however, would drop frames and never play adequately on one drive. So my first test was to transcode material to ProRes 422 HQ using Compressor and then editing in FCP. SCORE SONNET FUSION F2 DRIVE P R O S : Its design, speed and capacity make it a winner. C O N S : FireWire-based power may be problematic for some. B O T T O M L I N E : One of the most innovative portable storage products in a long time. M S R P : $895 CONTACT: www.sonnettech.com http://www.sonnettech.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Digital Video - January 2009 Digital Video - January 2009 Contents First Look: D90 Camera Sonicfire Pro 5 You Pod Instant Expert Muse 2.0 FXFactory Pro 2.0.5 Motype Fxpack DV Product Directory All Powered Up Creating Your Own Sun DV101 Production Diary Digital Video - January 2009 Digital Video - January 2009 - Digital Video - January 2009 (Page Cover1) Digital Video - January 2009 - Digital Video - January 2009 (Page Cover2) Digital Video - January 2009 - Digital Video - January 2009 (Page 3) Digital Video - January 2009 - Contents (Page 4) Digital Video - January 2009 - Contents (Page 5) Digital Video - January 2009 - Contents (Page 6) Digital Video - January 2009 - Contents (Page 7) Digital Video - January 2009 - First Look: D90 Camera (Page 8) Digital Video - January 2009 - First Look: D90 Camera (Page 9) Digital Video - January 2009 - First Look: D90 Camera (Page 10) Digital Video - January 2009 - First Look: D90 Camera (Page 11) Digital Video - January 2009 - Sonicfire Pro 5 (Page 12) Digital Video - January 2009 - You Pod (Page 13) Digital Video - January 2009 - Instant Expert (Page 14) Digital Video - January 2009 - Instant Expert (Page 15) Digital Video - January 2009 - Muse 2.0 (Page 16) Digital Video - January 2009 - Muse 2.0 (Page 17) Digital Video - January 2009 - FXFactory Pro 2.0.5 (Page 18) Digital Video - January 2009 - Motype Fxpack (Page 19) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19A) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19B) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19C) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19D) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19E) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19F) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19G) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19H) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19I) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19J) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19K) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19L) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19M) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19N) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19O) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV Product Directory (Page 19P) Digital Video - January 2009 - All Powered Up (Page 20) Digital Video - January 2009 - All Powered Up (Page 21) Digital Video - January 2009 - All Powered Up (Page 22) Digital Video - January 2009 - All Powered Up (Page 23) Digital Video - January 2009 - Creating Your Own Sun (Page 24) Digital Video - January 2009 - Creating Your Own Sun (Page 25) Digital Video - January 2009 - Creating Your Own Sun (Page 26) Digital Video - January 2009 - Creating Your Own Sun (Page 27) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV101 (Page 28) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV101 (Page 29) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV101 (Page 30) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV101 (Page 31) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV101 (Page 32) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV101 (Page 33) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV101 (Page 34) Digital Video - January 2009 - DV101 (Page 35) Digital Video - January 2009 - Production Diary (Page 36) Digital Video - January 2009 - Production Diary (Page Cover3) Digital Video - January 2009 - Production Diary (Page Cover4)
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