Maxing out RAM would probably offer the *most* bang-for-the-buck for
Photoshop.

There's an advantage to having a separate physical drive for Photoshop's
scratch disk. Doesn't seem to matter whether it's SSD or traditional
spinning platter.

http://blogs.adobe.com/crawlspace/2011/05/how-to-tune-photoshop-cs5-for-peak-performance.html

http://blogs.adobe.com/crawlspace/2012/10/how-to-tune-photoshop-cs6-for-peak-performance.html

Looks like Bill already has a separate drive for his scratch disk.

If I needed to speed Photoshop up, I would max out RAM first, add a
separate drive of any kind for Photoshop's scratch disk and only after I
had done those two items replace the boot drive with a SSD.


On 5/8/2014 1:48 AM, David Mann wrote:
Is there any advantage to having a separate physical drive for PS
swap when you're using an SSD?

On May 8, 2014, at 11:42 am, Bill <[email protected]>
wrote:

Hi, I would like to increase the capacities of my solid state hard
drives. What is the sweet spot these days? What kind of read/write
speeds should I be looking for. I don't want to spend a ridiculous
amount of money, so I realize I will be taking second tier
performance. My size needs aren't extravagant, my present C drive
is 128gb, my Photoshop swap drive is 64mb.

thanks bill


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