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And this is why I tell everyone to buy a 500GB SSD. 120 and 250GB SSD's are worthless.
But for anything you record too, that target drive better be dam fast, not a 5400rpm anything, or WD Green...
So yea these Raptors will serve as a great target drive for recording videos with ridiculously good bitrates and the drives wont break a sweat due to the RAID. But I also using them as a temp dumping ground of sorts, so if they do die, no big deal.
Thats not really going to help regarding things like video recording/streaming.
Maybe just having too little RAM + slow drives, sure; but needing something like RAM-Disk (which basically requires u having approx 24GB minimum RAM to really do it well enough to be worthy of using); hmm no, not a need.
oh right my mistake I landed in the wrong thread :D
I meant SSD yes. I have a 1tb hdd and 2tb hdd so I'm not really wanting to dish out $100+ for an SSD when I've got the space on my HDDs to record to.
I haven't had issues in the past so I'm not sure what's going on. Setting csgo.exe to high priority minimzes the stuttering, but it's still slightly noticeable so it just bothers me that I know it's there and I can't fix it.
SSD is worth it and it will night/day difference for the entire system to have the OS run off the SSD. Then record video to the SSD due to its like 10X faster read & write then any typical SATA HDD. Then once you've recorded the video, take the time to edit it if need be, then save the final output version of video to a HDD. Then delete the video off the SSD to free up that space for more recording.
I tried OBS in Linux with my old i5 650 and GTX 1060, it could record a 720p window fine @ 30 fps, but 1080p full screen ended up more like a slide show. So I tried setting my screen resolution to 720p, but apparently the Nvidia driver up converts that to native screen resolution, because my HDTV still said it was receiving a 1080p signal, and OBS would drop way too many frames to be useful.
SimpleScreenRecorder was able to record 1080p @ 30 fps fine. But that was saving the video uncompressed and files were HUGE. So if you wanted to distribute that video, you would need to do post processing video compression.
You might consider an external HDMI recording device. But pay attention to details. Some can record directly to USB memory/drive or SD, but some require a separate computer or laptop to process, compress, and store the video data.