Hardware upgrades for roadhog 4

I have many questions I haven't really thought to ask until now.  As many people have noted, things like the patch window has always been very slow, but now the preferences window can be extremely slow as well.  That got me thinking about the machine I already own...

Question 1:  Can I upgrade the ram and SSD?  I'm assuming I can go to 8GB and a 256GB SSD without much issue... why would I do this?  Many reasons.  This machine is over 10 years old and version 4.0 seems to be showing that more and more.

Question 2:  Is there a drop in processor upgrade I can look for?  I am plenty familiar with building pcs, putting an upgraded chip into a similar socket type is more of an AMD thing so I don't have much hope here.

Question 3:  Can I simply drop in the motherboard from the RoadHog 4-21?  It's nearly impossible to find actual documentation of the internals so I'm left asking the questions here.

Question 4:  Can I install motorized faders in the roadhog 4?  Again I can't see the internals of the hog 4 or 4-19, I'm not sure if there's extra hardware to control the motors themselves.  If it's just an extra pcb... is there any way to install that into the roadhog?  (I don't mean physically fit in in there, I know I could, there is a lot of empty space.  I'm aware that the programming for the roadhog and hog 4 are a little different, pcbs a little different... does that make this upgrade impossible?

Parents
  • Question 1 Part 2 SSD - Answer: there is no problem installing as large as a 2TB SSD, they're just expensive.  A 500GB to 1TB will be the most cost efficient.

    Some pros about having a seemingly oversized drive:

    1.  Last much longer as it takes more time to write over the much larger number of memory locations.  This comes up a lot in forums when discussing which M.2 NVMe drive to get and why.  The rule of thumb was to get a small one just for the OS and a huge one for your main drive and throw in some SSD's for long term storage or RAID configuration.  Now we shove the largest drive affordable everywhere.

    2.  Without going into insane detail, the speed of the larger drives is usually higher than the smaller ones, even if not specifically listed on packaging.  This can help with things like boot time, extremely slow fixture library or preference window loading, and will even run ever so slightly cooler.

    Cons:

    They're not M.2, which at this point at cheaper and much faster, even the gen 1's...

Reply
  • Question 1 Part 2 SSD - Answer: there is no problem installing as large as a 2TB SSD, they're just expensive.  A 500GB to 1TB will be the most cost efficient.

    Some pros about having a seemingly oversized drive:

    1.  Last much longer as it takes more time to write over the much larger number of memory locations.  This comes up a lot in forums when discussing which M.2 NVMe drive to get and why.  The rule of thumb was to get a small one just for the OS and a huge one for your main drive and throw in some SSD's for long term storage or RAID configuration.  Now we shove the largest drive affordable everywhere.

    2.  Without going into insane detail, the speed of the larger drives is usually higher than the smaller ones, even if not specifically listed on packaging.  This can help with things like boot time, extremely slow fixture library or preference window loading, and will even run ever so slightly cooler.

    Cons:

    They're not M.2, which at this point at cheaper and much faster, even the gen 1's...

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