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CJ Jacobson

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Everything posted by CJ Jacobson

  1. Is the soft synth connected to the MIDI track? This would be my first guess
  2. My 2 cents and it worked for me for over 30 years. If its working the way you want it to work, do not mess with it. If you are having issues and problems, then you need to start troubleshooting why you are having those issues.
  3. Have you tried it? That wouldn't be the easiest what to find out. Just record and select and look at something else while reoccurring. Just try it... My guess (because i don't fully comprehend your question) is that you can look at anything and select things while you are recording. I do that all the time when recording
  4. Try de-selecting the Microsoft GS Wavetable and that may solve your issue Try a different USB cable & What external hardware sound modules are you outputting to?
  5. I have one of the most invasive antiviruses ruining in real time while im using my DAW and i have no problems and dropouts (norton sym) Todays PC's can run virus p[programs and DAWs at the same time
  6. I doubt an antivirus program is causing your drop outs, especially with today's PC's and how streamlined antiviral programs are now. One fast way to find out is to disable the program and see if you are still get drop outs. But drop outs are cured by raising your ASIO or WDM buffers. That should cure it
  7. It probably is because of some of the Edits / Recording and etc you did. Depending on the edits and what ever else you did, those edits can effect the save time. Try another project and see. FYI: I have not noticed any difference after the update.
  8. For me, everything is on the C drive., except audio. I keep that on another Internal hard drive (not external) Today's drives are very powerful and can store large amounts of data. Hey but that is me!! If your drives are suffering, Do what ever works for you and makes your workflow easier, but if it isn't broke, no need to fix it.
  9. What is this so called 'MIDI Stuff' you want to do? Do you want to record actual audio form the machine mk2 inside your DAW? Do you want to play and trigger already recorded MIDI Data form inside your DAW? Do you want to record MIDI Data and have soft synths triggering it inside your DAW? As far as configuring it. What have you done or tried? Do you have it hooked up to your PC? Does your PC recognize the machine? Are you trying to use the 5pin MIDI ins and outs or a USB to connect it to your PC? Did you con figure the ins and out sin the DAW's preference menu? Did you install all the native drivers/firmware for your PC's OS architecture? check this out - https://www.native-instruments.com/en/specials/maschine-setup/ CJ
  10. Processor speed and hard drive speed Same as #1, hard drive speed and processor speed. Make use you have a dedicated hard drive for audio only. do not put audio project on your C drive Ram, Processor speed, hard drive speed and how well your audio drivers are written for that audio interface That monitors your entire PC, so you have other programs running in the background. So your PC is doing hundreds of task in the background. FYI: 59% doesn't mean your DAW is using 59%, as you are looking at your entire PC. yuo need to look at the CPU monitors inside your DAW
  11. I never saw the OP mention he was using it in his signal chain. If he is, then he can do it, if both cards allow master and slave designation
  12. Its impossible to run 2 different audio interfaces for recording. Its a clocking issue (sample rate issue) as even if they are both set to 48kHz, the clocking will be slightly different for each audio interface. If you where to use 2 of the same interfaces and they are capable of being daisy chained, then you can do it. But not 2 different ones So you cannot use 2 different audio interfaces at the same time for recording to get more inputs into your DAW
  13. Try adjusting your audio interfaces ASIO buffers. Most likely raise them AND/OR try going into your AUD.INI file and raise the 'DropoutMsec' setting in the aud.ini file. If its too low, it can cause a lot of drop outs that in normal circumstances, may not happen
  14. A Few Things: it can be one or 2 or all the above 1st - When using a laptop with you DAW, the internal hard drives can be at a speed of 5200rpm in most cases. So you should get an external drive that spins at 7200rpm or higher, as 7200rpm s the recommended speed for hard drives. 2nd - Lower your sound card buffers to its lowest possible settings. 3rd - Try using ASIO driver modes, if you are using WDM and make sure you are using the most current version of drivers for your audio interface 4th - If you are using any sort of plugin in your DAW, they can be causing the latency as a lot of plugins have hidden buffers.
  15. The BSOD (Blue screen of death) are usually caused by faulty drivers form a 3rd party manufacturer. Make sure all drivers are up to date that are in your PC and make sure all are compatible with your PC architecture
  16. It depends, its not black and white. It depends on the clock speed and the amount of cores you are comparing. For example, if the clock speed is just slightly lower, I go for the 'more cores and lower clock speed. BUT, if the clock speed is a lot lower, i may go with the faster speed and less cores. They should but it depends on the big picture of all your PC specs. The video card is a piece of the puzzle.
  17. If you are maxing out your PC resources, try raising your audio interface drivers to 1024 or what ever setting that makes it larger. If you are at 256, try 512 before going to 1024. As others said, the sample rate cannot be changed unless you export each track at the same rate you want and then import them back into a new project at the new sample rate. Sample rates are your clocking.
  18. You should be able to click on the ruler in the track view and get it back.
  19. Are you talking about the margins on the top of a clip from being enabled as a 'Groove clip'? If yes, then you should be able to right click the clip and enabler it as a groove clip again and it will follow the projects tempo and you can stretch it out as well
  20. Did you add the 3rd pin or take it out to lift it? PLEASE Make sure your stuff is grounded somewhere ⚡
  21. RCA are unbalanced, so that can be part or all your problems. It doesn't matter if you use a 1/4" from it. It will not make RCA balanced. If you just swapped them out with other monitors and the noise went away, there is your answer. Stay away from KRK's. A quick google search would have made you understand they are noisy, boxy and other things.
  22. The 'noise' can be caused by a few things, so you just need to troubleshoot and rule out some things: Are you using balanced cables from your audio interface/sound-card to your KRK's? They need to be balanced. Are you using one wall wart for all your electrical connections? Try another wall wart on another electrical circuit Do you have any LCD lighting in your studio? When you hear the 'noise' are you recording anything or mixing? Are any audio cables crossing or near any electrical cables? They should not be. Check and replace all cables involved, as a faulty balanced cable can cause noise KRK are known to be a little noise. Just do a quick search and you'll read countless occasions, but it should not be really noisy and getting in the way of recording and mixing. As far as you saying "you cannot hear your mouse noise" That is a good thing when you are doing music production. Do you really want to hear 'click click clackety clack' when you are mixing a song or recording a song? Check your sound settings on your PC for window sounds and set them up the way you want.
  23. I never ever put a reverb on the Master Bus. I usually have about 2 to 6 different reverbs on bus's and i use them in conjunction with mid and side edits to create a 3D stereo field so each instrument is in its own space. Reverb can be used any way you want it, as long as it gets you the sound you want. so use it where ever you want If it sounds improper, then its improper. Each reverb can be set a billion different ways, you just need to use your ears to set it so it sound s the way you want it to. First of all, you never SOLO an instrument when you are mixing it in a mix, as all the other instruments effect the sound of every other instrument in the mix. You just do what ever sounds best for that mix Try what ever way you can think of and do what sound best for that mix. If CPU is a problem, raise your buffers. Todays PC's can handle hundreds of plugin effects. No need to worry about CPU
  24. Forget what other people are using. Your instrument tracks, mixes, and personnel preferences are different from theirs and in return, you will need different things done to each and every track. It changes with every instrument track and every mix. Because i do not want the same sound for every single thing . Every guitar track, bass track, vocal track will need different things done to it in order for it to fit in every specific mix. Other instruments effect the sound of other instruments in the mix. So i do not have a set plugin chain for every instrument track. I like to mix with my ears & personnel preferences and then let those tell me what needs to be done to each and every track. I think over time you will know that this question has a million different answers and all answers are correct, as long as it gets you the sound you want.
  25. Just raise your ASIO buffers or go into your Aud.ini file and raise the setting for the dropout. But i would raise your ASIO drivers first, as that will work
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