quattj Posted yesterday at 12:08 AM Posted yesterday at 12:08 AM Is there a way to get Sonar to follow system audio settings? I constantly have to go in to the preferences any time I connect or remove my earbuds or other external speakers/microphones. I'd like it to automatically switch to whatever the current Windows device is. Very jarring when I have put headphones in for privacy and my music starts blaring out of my laptop speakers.
57Gregy Posted yesterday at 01:15 AM Posted yesterday at 01:15 AM 1 hour ago, quattj said: Is there a way to get Sonar to follow system audio settings? I constantly have to go in to the preferences any time I connect or remove my earbuds or other external speakers/microphones. I'd like it to automatically switch to whatever the current Windows device is. Very jarring when I have put headphones in for privacy and my music starts blaring out of my laptop speakers. You shouldn't have this problem if you used Sonar with your audio interface designed for recording and the computer's sound card for everything else. 2
quattj Posted yesterday at 02:09 AM Author Posted yesterday at 02:09 AM I use Sonar strictly for editing MIDI files.
57Gregy Posted yesterday at 02:26 AM Posted yesterday at 02:26 AM 19 minutes ago, quattj said: I use Sonar strictly for editing MIDI files. So, how do you hear the MIDI? 1
Bass Guitar Posted yesterday at 03:30 AM Posted yesterday at 03:30 AM (edited) I was just travelling with my laptop and just like you I found it a bit annoying that Sonar wouldn’t always switch to my headphones when I plugged them in. Everything else did. Audacity. Media Player etc. But all I needed to do was change the output in the Master bus. @57Gregy I own 6 audio interfaces but in the case of using a laptop I rarely use them. There’s nothing wrong with using on board audio if you’re not recording audio tracks. Just listening using good headphones is more or less going to be the same thing plugged into a computer or an interface. With WASAPI exclusive there’s isn’t any noticeable playback latency. The biggest difference between an audio interface and the computer audio is the specs. An interface will have higher quality Converters and ( hopefully) better signal to noise specs. But that depends entirely on the computer and the audio interface build quality and driver quality. Edited 19 hours ago by Bass Guitar 1 1
Promidi Posted yesterday at 04:26 AM Posted yesterday at 04:26 AM 1 hour ago, 57Gregy said: I use Sonar strictly for editing MIDI files. Do you outboard MIDI gear, use MIDI notes for your Metronome and you have no audio tracks present in your project? If all of the above is true, then the audio engine should even need to run. That is how I edit MIDI files in Sonar and the audio engine is not running. Unless you are using VST synths.
57Gregy Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago Just for the record., the OP wrote, "I use Sonar strictly for editing MIDI files." I quoted him. Hasn't there been discussion about this operation in the past? Wasn't it due to how Sonar exposes ASIO drivers? or some such tech talk.
Bass Guitar Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago (edited) 48 minutes ago, 57Gregy said: Wasn't it due to how Sonar exposes ASIO drivers? or some such tech talk. Yes but that is a completely different issue that I think you are referring to. That is the issue with using a proper ASIO interface but there’s 3rd party ASIO drivers present in the system that can take over. In a system that only uses the computer audio you should also get rid of 3rd party junk and keep it simple. Windows Audio using WASAPI drivers is a solid system and a big upgrade from years ago when all we had was MME and WDM modes. There is no need to use Asio4all anymore as example. The OP’s issue is simply that Sonar has never liked it when you make a change to the on board audio set up. Computer audio uses 2 or more outputs in most cases it is Speakers or Headphones. In windows settings you can set a default but that doesn’t always stick. You plug in headphones and It kills the speakers. But Sonar might interpret that as the audio system was just turned off. It should pop up a dialogue box and ask you to do something but this is hit or miss. How many threads have we all seen that the OP said they couldn’t hear anything and the solution was the Master bus was set to “None”. That’s what I found when I plugged in my headphones with Sonar open. The solution is always keep the headphones or a set of powered speakers plugged in. Plug them in before you start Sonar. I generally never use my laptop speakers because they suck. But because I was only messing around with installing a couple of plugins I didn’t plug the headphones in. That was when I discovered that Sonar didn’t like it when I plugged them in when it was running. But I knew what to do right away so not really a big deal. Edited 17 hours ago by Bass Guitar 2
mettelus Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 14 hours ago, Bass Guitar said: I was just travelling with my laptop and just like you I found it a bit annoying that Sonar wouldn’t always switch to my headphones when I plugged them in. Everything else did. Audacity. Media Player etc. I think this is the OP's issue. Laptops are designed so that if headphones are present, that is what gets used (default behavior). Most DAWs can be latched on to a device (which you want), but if that device is set "Windows Audio" it should follow what Windows (or the laptop) is doing. From the OP it seems that Windows' behavior is being overridden by the DAW in this instance. If you plug headphones in, the laptop speakers are supposed to go offline. 2
57Gregy Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 10 hours ago, Bass Guitar said: but that is a completely different issue that I think you are referring to. That is the issue with using a proper ASIO interface but there’s 3rd party ASIO drivers present in the system that can take over. I remember that now. Thanks for the clarification.
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