
When you say "big session" how many tracks are we talking? The biggest boost to performance is to have your session (including media) on an SSD so moving the audio to a non SSD is not going to help you.Īs SteveG says you should have your system, etc on the C Drive which should be an SSD but your session should be on a secondary internal drive which should also be an SSD - think about it - the bigger the session the more files Audition has to read from the disk so you want that to be the fastest disk you can get.Įven with that you can still experience lag I get what SteveG says about the C drive but IMO your case is a little bit more awkward. On the DAW I use a sacrificial SSD for them if it crashes through being overwritten too many times, it doesn't matter.īut however you look at it, the chances are that it's your system that is causing you all the grief, not Audition. If you have one you can connect permanently, then keep Audition's temp file locations set to it as well. Most importantly, don't save any work on the C: drive - Microshaft could easily trash that for you. And set the size of the paging file so that max and min are the same, so the system can't 'manage' it. On this laptop (with insufficient RAM to ditch the paging file completely) it looks like this:ĭon't let it do anything automatic at all - this just slows things down. There's a control panel for this - it's pretty easy to find.
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If you have enough RAM, then you can dispense with the paging file altogether, to some advantage. The OS grabs file locations and re-sizes them unless you stop it, and that's never been a good idea. The only temp file you could allow on the root drive is the OS one. Especially don't keep your Audition temp files on it. Keep only the OS and program files on your C: drive. Is that better than a secondary standard HDD?
