Hosting a full orchestra (e.g. 4.4.4.4. 4.4.4.1. Timp., Cym., Tub. Bells, Harp, Strings) in MIR Pro was apparently more than my old dual Xeon E5504 2.0GHz workstation with 16GB of DDR3-1333 RAM could handle. Windows Task Manager reported that I was only using half of my RAM but 100% of my CPUs.
Since it appears my five-year old workstation is spending more time at the repair shop of late than in my studio, my repairman asked me if I had considered purchasing a new computer. I had. After researching audio workstation sold online, it seemed to me that the following system offered the most bang for my buck.
i7 3930k 3.2GHz Six-Core CPU
64GB DDR3-1600 RAM
1 x 120GB SSD (OS)
2 x 320GB SSD (Samples)
1 x 2TB 7200 HDD (Projects)
But can it handle MIR Pro? Comparing it to the turnkey system for MIR Pro manufactured by VisionDAW, I learned that the i7 3930k scores higher benchmark ratings than both E5-2609 Xeon processors featured in the turnkey system--combined (according to www.cpubenchmark.net). However, benchmark scores may not tell the whole story. Perhaps, there are other points to consider in running MIR Pro smoothly that those on this forum can comment on.
If my old workstation can be repaired, I could run both computers in a master/slave configuration. Not being experienced in such matters, I wonder which of the following set-ups would yield the best results.
OPTIONS
1. Run everything on the new i7 workstation.
2. Old Workstation - Master (Sonar 8.5). New Workstation - Slave (VI Pro, VE Pro, MIR Pro).
3. New Workstation (DAW, VE Pro, VI Pro). Old Workstation (VE Pro, MIR Pro) (or vice versa).
4. Laptop (Master), New Workstation (MIR Pro), Old Workstation (Samples)
Any advice would be appreciated! Thanks!