- Digi 002 Rack Driver For Windows 7
- Digi 002 Rack Drivers Mac Snow Leopard
- Digidesign 003 Rack Drivers Mac Lion
- Avid Digi 002 Driver
Well, I am in a similar situation, trying to use my 002 with PT 11.0.1 on my new Mac mini (i7/2.6 ghz/OSX 10.9.4/) I have loaded the latest drivers, it is recognized in Mac preferences, shows up as 'Avid 002' in PT, but will not show up as an output in a session.
Supported CPU Models, Speeds & Requirements
- I wanted to use a Digi 002 rack as my interface, but Logic does not offer it as a choice when I go to audio preferences > devices > core audio. I get 9 choices of devices, but they are all built-in. At first I thought I could install a Digidesign core audio driver and make the 002 show up.
- Use the links on this page to download the latest version of Digidesign Digi 002 Rack drivers. All drivers available for download have been scanned by antivirus program.
Note – the best performance with Mac OS X and Digi 002 Rack is achieved by using fast dual processor Macs. Slower, single processor Macs will work with Digi 002 Rack, but at a reduced track and/or plug-in count. Pro Tools 6 for Mac OS X is fully compatible with Apple dual processor models. There is no need to install any additional software.
- 'FW800' Models - 1.25 GHz, 1.42 GHz
- 'Mirror Door' Models – 867 MHz, 1 GHz, 1.25 GHz
- 'Quicksilver 2002' 1GHz
- 'Quicksilver' 800MHz
- 'FW800' 1 GHz
- 'Quicksilver 2002' 800 MHz, 933 MHz
- 'Quicksilver' 733 MHz, 867 MHz
- 'Digital Audio' 733 MHz
Digi 002 Rack Driver For Windows 7
- 1 GHz with 17' Display
- 800MHz, 867 MHz, 1 GHz with 15' Display
- 1.25 GHz 17' LCD Flat Screen
- 1 GHz 17' LCD Flat Screen
- 1 GHz 15' LCD Flat Screen
The following computers are qualified for use with the Digi 002 Rack, but may result in lower performance:
- Apple Power Mac G4 (AGP graphics) - 667 MHz and under
- Apple PowerBook G4 – 667 MHz and under
- Apple iMac Flatscreen – 800 MHz and under
- Apple iBook 'Ice White' Dual-USB Models - 800 MHz and under (900 MHz model not tested)
Digi 002 Rack Drivers Mac Snow Leopard
The following computers are unsupported for use with Digi 002 Rack with Mac OS X:
- Apple G4 cube
- Apple Power Mac G4 (PCI Graphics)
- Apple Power Mac G3 Blue & White and older
- Apple iMac (G3 models)
- Apple eMac
- Apple PowerBook G3 ('Pismo') and older
- Apple iBook ('Clamshell')
Power Mac G5 Requires Pro Tools LE 6.2.3
System Software
Digidesign 003 Rack Drivers Mac Lion
Mac OS 10.2.6 or 10.2.8 (Jaguar) Required for Pro Tools LE 6.1.2
- See System Software: Mac OS X Requirements
Total System RAM
- 384 MB minimum, 512 or higher recommended
- More RAM increases overall system and Pro Tools performance
- 512 MB RAM or higher suggested for sessions with high edit density, extensive use of plug-ins, or simultaneous use with MIDI sequencers
- DigiTranslator 2.0 will also require additional RAM
- OS X does not require minimum or preferred RAM settings for Pro Tools as RAM is dynamically allocated
Avid Digi 002 Driver
Note: In Pro Tools 6.0.x, the maximum allowable RAM was 1.5 GB. MDD G4 models with 2.0 GB would cause a 'NeoAccess Error' and Pro Tools would not boot unless some RAM was removed. This issue is solved in Pro Tools 6.1 and higher. Answerbase Details
Additional Computer Requirements
- Color monitor required with a minimum resolution of 1024 x 768
- Apple QuickTime 6.1 or higher required
Basically you have 2 options. First one is to partition your OSX drive and to install each system on one of the partitions. It's the most convenient way probably and it does work for people but Pro Tools does not like it a lot to run from a partitioned drive in general. Second option is to run the second OSX from another internal or an external drive.
To get a well working Pro Tools system I would strongly recommend to use the internal OS drive in your Macbook for your music recording system (OSX Snow Leopard for example, whichever) only and an external drive for your daily use OSX El Capitan.
You didn't leave us the specs of your Macbook so we don't know what's the fastest port you have got for an external drive but you might use this one to connect the external OSX to your computer.
If you could get a SSD in an external USB 3 enclosure (given your Macbook already offers USB 3 ports) this would be ideal for such an application.
Check Amazon for a 250GB Samsung 850 Evo and an USB 3 enclosure for example which should not cost a lot nowadays.
If your computer still has got no USB 3, Thunderbolt (preferred) or FW800 may do the job. USB 2 might be too slow probably which might become annoying for daily usage.
What may help a lot to ease the whole procedure may be to use this little app to duplicate/clone your existing El Capitan installation to the dedicated external drive (you can use it to clone the system to any drive or partition of course).
http://bombich.com/
It's called Carbon Copy Cloner and you can use it for free for 30 days. Download it, install it on your current system and clone the existing system to the external drive.
After that you could make a clean install of OSX Snow Leopard on your internal drive (important-wipe your drive before installing Snow Leopard, there should be no remainings of the El Capitan system!) and build up a fresh Pro Tools recording system on it.
Please, be aware of that Pro Tools 12 will not run on OSX Snow Leopard. You will have to use OSX Mountain Lion 10.8.5 (up to version PT12.4) or OSX Mavericks 10.9.x for PT12 at least.
If you should decide to use an older version of Pro Tools though, Snow Leopard will be a good and stable OSX for the use with an 002 indeed.
If you however should consider to make a fresh install of your OSX El Capitan as well, you can do it on your internal drive again and then clone it to the external like described above or you can install it on the external drive directly. If you would prefer to do it the second way, you will find a lot tutorials how to do that on the web. For example.
http://macosxbits.com/2015/09/how-to...xternal-drive/
Finally let me say that Pro Tools always wants a stable and reliable OSX to work as supposed to and therefor it's the recommended way to install it on the internal drive of your Macbook and run the daily use OSX El Capitan from the external. You can try it the other way round as well but this will be no stable music recording system at the end of the day. For daily usage El Capitan via an external drive should work though.
So I hope this will help you further in a way.
The very best of success to you!