Uninstalling plugins on mac to free up space

Discussion in 'Mac / Hackintosh' started by farcaster, Jul 6, 2025 at 5:09 PM.

  1. farcaster

    farcaster Noisemaker

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    Hello, Like many of you I've tested a million plugins over the years, and now developed a workflow that works for me. The time has come to trim the fat. Will simply deleting .component files free up space, or do I need to somehow "uninstall" the plugins with a reverse installer .dmg ? I'm running an m1 mac on monterey, and installing AU only when possible as a logic user.

    I looked around for similar threads. I'm sure this exists but I couldn't find it. Thanks in advance for any tips :)

    ps. i know I can delete files in application support, digidesign library files etc. I guess i'm wondering if there is a specific protocol if the goal is to free up hard drive space. Also, any risk of corrupting any software if for example I delete one plugin by a manufacturer when I originally installed a whole software suite? Thanks for helping a n00b !

    w gratitude :)
     
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  3. clone

    clone Audiosexual

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    Wide Blue Sound Audio Plugin Uninstaller is what I use to remove single plugins. www.widebluesound.com/audio-plugin-uninstaller this was free at one point, and you can probably find a copy of it if you look around.

    But I use Buho for disk space cleanup. https://www.drbuho.com/buhocleaner/download. That is a free version. Be careful with it, meaning if you are not sure about something don't do it. Mostly Cache and Logs.

    There is no problem deleting individual .component plugins.
     
    Last edited: Jul 6, 2025 at 5:19 PM
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  4. sisyphus

    sisyphus Audiosexual

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    ...agree with all clone said, I would toss in that for some things that may be tricker or apps etc, I manually approach things using Find Any File (FAF), and I trust Nektony's App Cleaner & Uninstaller, but as clone said, you have to be careful as sometimes one can toss out some babies with the bathwater, so to speak, and I'd generally advise staying away from some applications out there that claim to "clean up" space etc, as they can be a little reckless and create problems.

    But for just plugins, and double checking against FAF or Nektony, Wide Blue Sounds' Audio Plugin Uninstaller has been great for me so far.
     
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  5. Balisani

    Balisani Producer

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    Good, sensible. questions all.
    • If you delete one plugin manually, you delete just that one plugin. No issues with the others from the "Suite."

    • The specific protocol is to go first to the [company name] website and look for Uninstall ___.dmg.
      - If there is one such plugin uninstall dmg, download and run it or them, and life is beautiful.
      - "Product Managers" (e.g., Native Access, UA Connect, Waves Central) also uninstall plugins.

    • If none of the above applies, or using the sister site installers (some of which come with uninstallers), delete AUs manually.
      - It helps to use an App Cleaner app, like AppCleaner.app - to track down dependencies, and trash them automatically.
      - Make sure to delete also from the Application folder, not only from the Application Support.

    • Generally speaking, presets, manuals, etc., are smaller in footprint, but
      1) not always (UAD, Waves, come to mind), and
      2) like PPG (pasta, pizza and gravity), it all adds up.
      3)
      some plugins (Convolution Reverbs, etc) store hundreds of MB of files.

      - Check your /Library/Documentation/ and /Documents/[company], and your /Music/Audio\ Music\ Apps folders for instance.
      -> An AppCleaner helps but may not pick up on those as "dependencies."
    Your best bet is uninstallers, but even manual deletion poses no danger to your system (if you're new, delete one and see for yourself).
     
  6. clone

    clone Audiosexual

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    Me too, but Buho is very good. If it has a weak area, it is in its Duplicate Finder. Everything else works perfectly, but you can be a bit heavy handed and delete stuff like your browser cache. It gets rid of everything but can leave some presets, and plist files in /preferences directory.
    I never use Cleaner apps, because paradoxically they often contain bloat and adware. You know where to find the full version.

    OP already said he knows to delete manually from the usual locations. I just do a manual cleanup every once in awhile, because without SIP disabled there are only so many places where files get payloaded, and none of them are confusing or sneaky. You just have to know where to look.
     
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