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lesnicole
Inspiring
January 28, 2019
Question

2019 iMac configuration advice

  • January 28, 2019
  • 6 replies
  • 2409 views

Hi all, I’ve read the FAQS about minimum requirements for Photoshop, but would love any feedback on the spec’s for the new iMac I’ll be ordering this week.

Background:

my mid 2011 iMac just bit the dust. Yeah, I know that’s old, but she held up pretty well. I had i7, 3.4 GB GHZ processor, 256 SSD with 2 TB HDD and 2GB graphics card. I also have a 4 TB LaCie External.

2019 Specs

The iMac Pro is out of my price range at this time, so I’m going with the iMac 3.8 Processor with i7, 512 SSD drive (for system, apps, and scratch disc. Adobe FAQs says this is best) The graphics card is a Radeon Pro 580 with 8 GB VRAM.

External Hard Drives

My old 2nd internal drive of 2TB is almost completely full and my external 4 TB has about 2 or more TB. I have an online graphics store and I‘m about to start doing video classes, so I need a lot of space to grow. I’m thinking of ordering a 10 TB LaCie Thunderbolt 3 with an 8 TB LaCie Porche USB drive for Back ups, plus I have Back Blaze for Cloud storage and I’ll keep backups on a few extra externals.

I’ve been reading a lot of articles, but the tech stuff isn’t my forté. Does all of this sound about right? The Apple Service guy I went to when my iMac died is trying to sell me on NAS drives, but I don’t think this would be sufficient for Photoshop performance, right?

Thanks so much for your input before I order.

This topic has been closed for replies.

6 replies

Brad_Trent
Known Participant
February 7, 2019

Dunno if you've already made your purchase...and I know you have already said a few times that you can't afford bumping up to the 1TB SSD...but I was able to test Photoshop files on the latest model iMac (4.2GHz quad-core 7th-generation Intel Core i7, 64GB 2400MHz DDR4, Radeon Pro 580) using the 512, 1TB and 2TD SSD's and I can safely state that the bigger the drive, the happier you're gonna be, especially if you're working on BIG files.

I tested all three configs using GB+ sized TIFFs and the results were eye-opening. With a 3GB TIFF, the 1TB SSD was almost twice as fast as the 512 on tasks like Content Aware Fill, most Transform functions (rotate, warp, perspective) and filters like Blur, Render and Stylize. Moving to the 2TB SSD showed another speed increase of around 20-25%.

I never bothered testing if these speed increases were consistent using smaller, sub-GB sized files, since 95% of my workflow involves huge, layered 16bit TIFFs processed from LEAF RAW files, but having that extra onboard scratch disc space certainly convinced me to buy the biggest SSD available, even though it's stupidly priced.

lesnicole
lesnicoleAuthor
Inspiring
February 9, 2019

Hi Brad, thanks for weighing in.

I'm actually going to make my purchase today or tomorrow. Your post makes me hesitate to rethink if I have any wiggle room to afford upping the SSD drive to the 1TB. I don't think I can though as it's an extra 500 euros and my allotted budget is already putting a major dent in my available funds. Would it make sense to think of either swapping the SSD drive in the future or getting an external SSD drive that is only for Photoshop Scratch disk?

Another place I have wiggle room on the price is if I install 3rd party RAM myself instead of getting the 32 RAM installed by Apple. I've done this in the past and the videos look simple, but I've also read that it's possible to mess up and void your warranty. If I messed this up, I would have no funds left to purchase another computer, so I'm hesitant!

lesnicole
lesnicoleAuthor
Inspiring
January 28, 2019

Thank you all for your input. I feel validated in my choices. Would love to have a bigger SSD drive and even more RAM, but won’t be able to afford it this time around. Really appreciate your time and advice.

Community Expert
January 28, 2019

Your planned system should do fine with the RAM you selected.  Personally, I would beef up the RAM more, to future proof things a bit. Then again,  my MacBook Pro have been running with 8Gigs of RAM for over the past 5 years and its still runs Photoshop with no issue

Legend
January 28, 2019

You aren't going to have any performance problems and you don't need a NAS. Stick with your planned system.

italosan
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 28, 2019

Hi lesnicole,
the configuration you selected for your iMac is perfect for your purposes. But my advice is to keep your working files and the OS on your main drive (the 500gb SSD in this case). But I know in many cases this will not be sufficient but, as D Fosse said before, in cases like yours there are 2 main factors who will affect your PS performances, ram and scratch disk. But lets say you are going to open a PSD file on an external drive the main part of the job will be still done on your RAM and SSD (if you have enough resources) and just when you will save your file you will face some slowness. Of course the best choice, as said before, is having your working file on your local SSD. In this case you can consider starting with the smallest SSD available on the Apple Store and then change it. (after market upgrades are easy, reliable and waaaaay cheaper than the original on the Apple Store).

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 28, 2019

Sounds good to me.

The critical part for Photoshop is the scratch disk, and with an SSD system drive you want to put it there. 512GB should be fine - but if you want to be future-proof 1TB is better. The Photoshop scratch files can be huge.

If that system drive is a PCIe M.2 (aka NVMe) drive - which it almost certainly is - then the amount of RAM isn't as critical as it used to be. These drives are so fast that the old scratch bottleneck is gone. 16 or 32GB RAM will do fine.

As for external storage and backup, the 8 or 10TB drives are coming down in price now, so that's a sensible investment. When I got mine they were terribly expensive, and starting to fill up by now

lesnicole
lesnicoleAuthor
Inspiring
January 28, 2019

Thank you for your comment. Would love to get the 1 TB SSD, but I’m already pushing my budget and that would increase it another $500. Maybe eventually an extra SSD?

Yeah, I’m going with the 10TB HD as already outgrowing my drives. It‘s only an additional 60 euros from the 8TB.

Any knowledge on NAS? I’m thinking that Thunderbolt 3 is the best option for my files.

Appreciate your time and input.