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Re: Speccing an iMac for production.
| quote: | Originally posted by tehlord
I'm about to enter a period of turmoil as I sell my place here and move to a bigger property, which means I'll probably have to pack up the majority of my studio for perhaps a couple of months.
I don't want a laptop/MBP as I just find them fiddly and awkward to use for more than 10 minutes at a time.
My current favourite would be a 2.7ghz(i5) iMac. I'll add another 4-8GB of RAM to it and plug in an external HDD myself. That's a considerable upgrade in terms of performance from my old Q9400 DAW and I've yet to run into any barriers with that.
Am I correct in thinking that I can run Core audio without a soundcard for a while quite happily as well (as long as i'm not recording audio obviously) as I want to be able to pick the thing up and move it to another room in 2 minutes if I want to.
This will also mean that I'm running my AKG's straight out of the headphone socket on the iMac. Is it loud enough to do this satisfactorally? I guess I could grab a little Apogee Solo if I really needed to.
This will also serve as my main DAW once I move as well. |
First congrats for seeing the light
Secondly, I have actually used my imac as a semi mobile DAW before and works really damn well. I've even taken mine on holiday before; the place we were staying at called me the day before to let me know the TV in our room broke and they wouldn't not be able to get replacement in time for our stay so I grabbed the imac and it all fitted in a duffel bag. It actually amazed me how robust the imac is as it took a bit of a kicking during the trip and there wasn't a scratch or hiccup from it.
In your case, you'll just need the imac, keyboard, mouse, external drive, headphones and the main IEC (kettle) power lead. That's it.
Personally, I would get the highest spec imac you can afford, or take a look at the Apple refurbished and buy the highest spec one there. A friend bought the previous Gen one for a saving of $500 and it's probably only 5% down performance wise on the current model.
Either way, you're in a good place as firstly, it's a massive step up in terms of performance over your old rig, and secondly, imacs are the most cost effective and best performing (vs cost) product that apple make.
You'll be absolutely fine using the core audio - I did it for nearly a year and have to say the Imac's built in DAC is actually pretty damn good. The only thing you will find is that on really chunky projects, you'll start to get system overload messages in logic - it's not down to CPU or RAM issues, just the internal bottle necking caused by the core audio, but having said that you should be able to work just fine on basic to medium projects with no trouble whatsoever.
Headphone level will be just fine too.
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