This topic recently has come up in another thread, but I wanted to give it a bit more exposure. I've always read here at this forum that the swap file should NOT be on the video capture drive (assuming that the boot drive and the capture drive are different drives). However, in the November issue of Camcorder & Computer Video magazine, Peter Utz has written an article called Dropped Frames that states quite the opposite.
From page 30
Locate your swap file (virtual memory) on the same drive as your video. Having a swap file in the C: drive while capturing to the D: drive can cause you to drop frames. Evidence that your swap file is in the wrong place: While capturing or playing back video from the D: drive, you notice that the C: drive is being accessed; it should be quiet.
Locate your swap file (virtual memory) on the same drive as your video. Having a swap file in the C: drive while capturing to the D: drive can cause you to drop frames. Evidence that your swap file is in the wrong place: While capturing or playing back video from the D: drive, you notice that the C: drive is being accessed; it should be quiet.
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