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Final Cut Pro X Scratch Disks and Default Folder

Hello,


As I am migrating from Final Cut Pro 7 to Final Cut Pro X, I had a couple of questions.


1. I have Final Cut Pro X installed on my boot SSD drive. I do not want the default folder at /User/Movies/Final Cut Events to be on my default drive but rather to be on my External HD. How do I go about making sure Final Cut Pro X never creates an event on my SSD and only in the desired location of my External HD?


2. What is the difference between a Project and an Event? I realize a Project can only live within an Event?


3. Is there a way to set a Scratch Disk? If not, how do I go about making sure Final Cut Pro X does not utilize my main SSD drive as the scratch disk?


Thanks,


Nicolas

Final Cut Pro X, Mac OS X (10.7.3)

Posted on Feb 21, 2012 11:18 AM

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Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Feb 21, 2012 11:23 AM

I. Whenever you import media (an Event) FCP X asks you where you want it stored.


2. Events are just the media you use and a project is like an FCP 7 sequence.


3. See answer 1. You have to select each time you import.

10 replies

Feb 21, 2012 1:47 PM in response to Nicolas Online

1. You can create an Event on any drive you want. Events are merely a collection of media files. You can name these Events anything you want, and you can choose to put them on any drive you want (although they must be connected locally).


2. The difference between a Project and Event is pretty simple. An Event is a collection of media files. A Project is what you might think of as a Sequence. The difference between a Project in FCPX and previous versions of FCP is that in FCPX, a Project can only contain ONE sequence. But you can create a new Project or copy and paste an existing project to create a duplicate for tweaking (again, Projects can be put on any drive you want), and from that new Project, you can access ANY Event (meaning you can use media files from any Event in any Project). One correction to what you stated in your question: A Project does not "live within an Event." Instead, what happens is, when you create a new Project, FCPX asks you what Event you wish to associate with it. It remains something of a mystery to me, frankly, as to why FCPX asks this, since you can, in fact, use media from any Event in any Project. Still, FCPX does ask you to associate an Event with any new Project you create.


3. There is no way to set a Scratch Disk. The whole concept of Scratch Disks is no longer relevant in FCPX. You simply choose which hard drive you want each Event and each Project to be written to. When creating an Event, just click on the drive you want to use in the Event Browser, right click and choose "New Event." It'll put your new event on the drive you chose. And in the Project Browser, it works the same. Click on the drive where you want your project to live, then click the + button at the bottom to create a new Project, and FCPX will create the new Project on the drive you'd selected. It's actually much, much simpler than the old Scratch Disk concept.

Final Cut Pro X Scratch Disks and Default Folder

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