Pathfinder Posted Sunday at 03:03 AM Share Posted Sunday at 03:03 AM (edited) So I finally made the leap, was win 10 Pro, now win 11 Pro. So I had to raise the playback buffer....was 256 without issues but had to go to 512-still a little weird. Is this normal behavior? Thanks Edited Sunday at 03:08 AM by Pathfinder Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HOOK Posted Sunday at 10:03 AM Share Posted Sunday at 10:03 AM When I switched to Win11, I battled my "new" machine for months with bios tweaks. Then I realized I had forgot to disable core parking - which cured the remainder of my latency problems. Good luck. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rsinger Posted Sunday at 04:31 PM Share Posted Sunday at 04:31 PM I'm pretty sure you need to re-optimize your pc for audio when updating between windows versions. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pathfinder Posted Sunday at 08:55 PM Author Share Posted Sunday at 08:55 PM 4 hours ago, rsinger said: I'm pretty sure you need to re-optimize your pc for audio when updating between windows versions. I th e older days, there were sites where individuals with the knowledge of what to turn off\change whatever in win 7, 8, etc for daws. Any suggestions? I did ust disable the core parking thanks to th reminder from Hook above. Thanks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Amberwolf Posted yesterday at 01:47 AM Share Posted yesterday at 01:47 AM It's possible that extreme gaming optimizations may apply to an audio system. Back when I had to start using Win10 for one of my systems, I found Black Viper's Windows 10 Service Configuration pages to help quite a lot, without breaking anything. (I used the most extreme configuration that still allowed internet access). I'd guess they have Win11 info by now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bristol_Jonesey Posted yesterday at 05:22 AM Share Posted yesterday at 05:22 AM I'm pretty sure that, "these days", the amount of tweaks you need to do are pretty minimal compared to the dark ages of Windows XP & prior. Turning off core parking as noted above is the biggest one. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeremy Oakes Posted yesterday at 06:56 AM Share Posted yesterday at 06:56 AM ……. Turn USB sleepstate to never, turn off Windows sounds are also good ones to do. J 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeremy Oakes Posted yesterday at 06:57 AM Share Posted yesterday at 06:57 AM 5 hours ago, Amberwolf said: It's possible that extreme gaming optimizations may apply to an audio system. Back when I had to start using Win10 for one of my systems, I found Black Viper's Windows 10 Service Configuration pages to help quite a lot, without breaking anything. (I used the most extreme configuration that still allowed internet access). I'd guess they have Win11 info by now. No, he gave up after W10. But a lot of them apply to W11 J Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rsinger Posted yesterday at 03:52 PM Share Posted yesterday at 03:52 PM 18 hours ago, Pathfinder said: I th e older days, there were sites where individuals with the knowledge of what to turn off\change whatever in win 7, 8, etc for daws. Any suggestions? I did ust disable the core parking thanks to th reminder from Hook above. This is the guide I follow - https://www.sweetwater.com/sweetcare/articles/pc-optimization-guide-for-windows-10/ 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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