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Post by SlowMo on Feb 13, 2009 10:41:17 GMT
jeah. works like a charm on both my systems (PC: AMD Athlon 2800+(barton) 1024mb Ram, Asus A7n8x Mainboard; Notebook: Asus F5V, Pentiium Core Duo 2x2ghz, 2Gb Ram ) i'm using the lowest latency settings possible, no pops/crackles whatsoever. i tested the latency using my minidisc recorder as a stop watch. (it can record in 44.1 PCM) I put a mic into the right channel, switched direct monitoring on (no mono) so i get the initial, non latency signal on the right out only. In reason I connected the right rebirth input machine channel to the left output (no other connections). Now I produced pops on the mic, The minidisc got the original pop on the right channel, and the one that went though reason on the left. The Offset between the two channels is My latency. the result is a stunning 7ms offset for in and out again. pretty quick imo. ....anybody's got an idea on how to _easily_ find out the latency between midi input (note) and sound output (audio) ? -how to pick up the trigger signal ? Really great driver anyways, totally awesome to have audio input in reason, AND low latency.
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basil
New Member
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Post by basil on Dec 12, 2009 3:01:06 GMT
Hi,
I have the same Edirol Interface and I can only get 17.9ms with the drivers that came with it and I need something thats has lower latency for monitoring vocals using Reaper. How low can you get using a mic with out any pops and clicks? Were able to get 7ms total or 14ms with the in and out combined ?
Thanks Basil
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basil
New Member
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Post by basil on Dec 12, 2009 15:23:17 GMT
Your reply is scambled
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Post by Michael Tippach on Dec 12, 2009 17:06:57 GMT
This has merely been the daily wave of forum spam. An unwanted side effect being, that, over the years, large portions of mainland China may have become blacklisted this way.
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basil
New Member
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Post by basil on Dec 12, 2009 21:16:21 GMT
Ok ...now I understand
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Post by SlowMo on Jan 11, 2010 22:25:39 GMT
Hi Basil, sorry for the late reply, didn't expect anyone to post in this thread anymore, just found your reply by chance... so umm how can i achieve those settings you ask - well, you can read my hardware specs above, you haven't told me yours. in terms of software its a commonly known fact, that you need your windows in good shape, in order to run DAWs on it. You can find those tweaks anywhere on the net, i found the RME-Audio supportpage a very good source of DAW tweaking tips. And you just need to keep your windows clean. running a parallel Linux for everyday use and using windows only for DAW purposes would be one possible measure to achieve that. (or having windows installed twice...) good luck
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