It would depend on the type of editor you are using and the way it is configured.Hi all. Would there be any noticeable difference with editing photos from an external HD vs if they were stored on the internal SSD?
Lightroom (now "Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic CC 2018") it's more complex than what this implies.If you're planning on using Lightroom or similar - I'd recommend working with them on your internal SSD and then move them onto your external when you're done.
Lightroom (now "Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic CC 2018") it's more complex than what this implies.
With Lr, ignoring the new cloud version, the storage location for the previews and library database is separate from the location of the actual image files. To get the best performance, you definitely what the database and previews to be on the internal SSD. Having the actual files on an external device, SSD or HD, will not slow down operations significantly, at least in most cases, and never hinders "editing" performance once in the Develop module.
The OP's question was not whether there are problems, but whether storing the photo library internally is significantly faster. My MacBook Pro's SSD is 7-15x faster than the average read/write speed of a spinning platter hard drive and seek times are at least 10x faster. I do store older Aperture libraries on my Synology NAS and external hard drives, and I can open them and browse them just fine. But when doing edits on many photos, it is significantly slower.I disagree with the poster above. [...] I have no problems viewing/editing my photo libraries this way.
None at all.
I would suggest another workflow: import new projects to your SSD and then move the files off to an external hard drive once you are done with them or they are sufficiently “old”. With Lightroom and other DAM (digital asset managers) you can do that. I wouldn't immediately put newly imported photos on an external spinning platter hard drive.So what is the best way to move in and move it photos from Lightroom or Apple photos to the SSD on the Mac, while still keeping the majority of the photos in the external HD?
I think that the point is that Lightroom has never benefitted much by the use of SSDs. Plenty of thorough tests demonstrated this. I personally keep the Lightroom catalog and previews on the SSD even though there's not a lot of speed benefit, because I have the space to do so and it certainly doesn't hurt, but my photos go on an external hard drive.The OP's question was not whether there are problems, but whether storing the photo library internally is significantly faster. My MacBook Pro's SSD is 7-15x faster than the average read/write speed of a spinning platter hard drive and seek times are at least 10x faster. I do store older Aperture libraries on my Synology NAS and external hard drives, and I can open them and browse them just fine. But when doing edits on many photos, it is significantly slower.
I think that the point is that Lightroom has never benefitted much by the use of SSDs. Plenty of thorough tests demonstrated this. I personally keep the Lightroom catalog and previews on the SSD even though there's not a lot of speed benefit, because I have the space to do so and it certainly doesn't hurt, but my photos go on an external hard drive.
120MB/s is about the max on a spinning drive. An SSD should hit the limit of 300MB/s on USB 3.0. USB 3.1 will get near the SATA3 limit of 600MB/s. Regardless, the near-zero seek time on SSDs is what really helps.I ran a speed test on my SSD. Is around 620 read and write. I tried my G Tech 1tb drive, usb 3.0 and it was about 120MBS
I have another backup drive, WD 3 TB but I can't write to it and tried to change the permissions and it would't let me.
I realized that I have 2 iPhoto library folders. the older one is 37 gigs.. wow, I am moving that to my backup HD, Im sure I can find some more stuff that can be moved. May not need another external HD for my laptop for ongoing photo processing.. I may pick the Samsung T5 500 gig SSD for giggles , its cheap.
120MB/s is about the max on a spinning drive. An SSD should hit the limit of 300MB/s on USB 3.0. USB 3.1 will get near the SATA3 limit of 600MB/s. Regardless, the near-zero seek time on SSDs is what really helps.
I guess I should also add that you will be limited to USB 3.0 or Thunderbold 2 speeds on your 2014 MBP. Thunderbolt enclosures are really expensive, but I don’t think you really need one. USB 3.0 would suffice, especially if you mainly intend to archive to external drives. If you have iCloud storage, you can also let Photos manage your storage locally, just be sure to have a physical copy of your files stored locally, just in case.I just looked at my lightroom catalogs,, a whole bunch of stuff.. one folder has 93 gig in it! no wonder my HD is getting full.. I wonder if I should not off load that to external HD then do the edits on the internal hd.
... I wonder if I should not off load that to external HD then do the edits on the internal hd.