Approve the Cookies
This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and our Privacy Policy.
OK
Forums  •   • New posts  •   • RTAT  •   • 'Best of'  •   • Gallery  •   • Gear
Guest
Forums  •   • New posts  •   • RTAT  •   • 'Best of'  •   • Gallery  •   • Gear
Register to forums    Log in

 
FORUMS General Gear Talk Computers 
Thread started 27 Apr 2009 (Monday) 01:06
Search threadPrev/next
sponsored links (only for non-logged)

Trouble with .DNG and new HD.

 
mikeassk
Goldmember
Avatar
2,329 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Aug 2006
Location: San Diego/ San Fran/ Berkeley
     
Apr 27, 2009 01:06 |  #1

Has anyone had trouble converting RAW files to DNG. I am using CS4(Bridge) and a Seagate 1TB external with a MBP. My old HD was fine, ( Exact same model) but this one is cooking my Mac, running at 190 degrees to convert about 4 gigs.
Any Ideas?


Stuff

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
tim
Light Bringer
Avatar
51,010 posts
Likes: 375
Joined Nov 2004
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
     
Apr 27, 2009 01:22 |  #2

If you're working it hard and it doesn't have a fan it'll get hot. I can't be bothered converting to American units so I can't really tell you if that's too hot or not. Probably is though. Point a fan at it or something, or get a better drive.

If I run a backup to my external SATA drive that has no fan it gets warm, but not hot.


Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
Read all my FAQs (wedding, printing, lighting, books, etc)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
mikeassk
THREAD ­ STARTER
Goldmember
Avatar
2,329 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Aug 2006
Location: San Diego/ San Fran/ Berkeley
     
Apr 27, 2009 01:38 |  #3

It is about 88 centigrade.
I am going to have to get a Desktop.
My laptop is going to fry up doing this daily.


Stuff

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
tim
Light Bringer
Avatar
51,010 posts
Likes: 375
Joined Nov 2004
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
     
Apr 27, 2009 01:45 |  #4

My hard drives are 38 celcius, 60 degrees is as hot as they're meant to get. Do you have plenty of room around the external drive for cooling? Does it have a fan, and if so is it working?


Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
Read all my FAQs (wedding, printing, lighting, books, etc)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
mikeassk
THREAD ­ STARTER
Goldmember
Avatar
2,329 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Aug 2006
Location: San Diego/ San Fran/ Berkeley
     
Apr 27, 2009 02:01 |  #5

Oh,
I was misleading,
Its the computer.


Stuff

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
Moppie
Moderator
Avatar
15,102 posts
Gallery: 24 photos
Best ofs: 1
Likes: 451
Joined Sep 2004
Location: Akarana, Aotearoa. (Kiwiland)
     
Apr 27, 2009 02:04 |  #6

The CPU is hitting 88 deg?

That is pretty hot, I would have thought it would have shut down by then.


But converting 4gb worth of photos will using CS4 will load up any system to its max levels.

If you do it on a regular basis then a quad core desktop would be a very good idea.
Lap tops are simply not designed for that level of work on a regular basis.


flickr (external link)

Have you Calibrated your Monkey lately?

Now more than ever we need to be a community, working together and for each other, as photographers, as lovers of photography and as members of POTN.

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
mikeassk
THREAD ­ STARTER
Goldmember
Avatar
2,329 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Aug 2006
Location: San Diego/ San Fran/ Berkeley
     
Apr 27, 2009 02:15 |  #7

^
Yes. Your right.
This the first time it has ever happened.
It does NOT do it if I am converting them to the computers HD,
just the external.
It will heat up,
but not 89 degrees C.


Stuff

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
tim
Light Bringer
Avatar
51,010 posts
Likes: 375
Joined Nov 2004
Location: Wellington, New Zealand
     
Apr 27, 2009 04:29 |  #8

Strange. I guess it's just working that little bit harder, and laptops are pretty compact. 88 degrees is pretty hot for a cpu though. Make sure the sides and bottom of the laptop aren't obstructed, make sure it's on a hard flat surface, but there's not much else you can do. If it's multi-core tell it to run using only one core to keep the temp down, and run it overnight - the air's cooler then too.

Modern computers will typically shut themselves down before they let you damage the CPU from heat.


Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
Read all my FAQs (wedding, printing, lighting, books, etc)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
sponsored links (only for non-logged)

948 views & 0 likes for this thread, 3 members have posted to it.
Trouble with .DNG and new HD.
FORUMS General Gear Talk Computers 
AAA
x 1600
y 1600

Jump to forum...   •  Rules   •  Forums   •  New posts   •  RTAT   •  'Best of'   •  Gallery   •  Gear   •  Reviews   •  Member list   •  Polls   •  Image rules   •  Search   •  Password reset   •  Home

Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!


COOKIES DISCLAIMER: This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and to our privacy policy.
Privacy policy and cookie usage info.


POWERED BY AMASS forum software 2.58forum software
version 2.58 /
code and design
by Pekka Saarinen ©
for photography-on-the.net

Latest registered member is semonsters
1052 guests, 103 members online
Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018

Photography-on-the.net Digital Photography Forums is the website for photographers and all who love great photos, camera and post processing techniques, gear talk, discussion and sharing. Professionals, hobbyists, newbies and those who don't even own a camera -- all are welcome regardless of skill, favourite brand, gear, gender or age. Registering and usage is free.