help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
- andrew embassy
- george martin
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help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
The thing sounds great; I'm super pleased with the sound quality, but I get stuttering during playback in ACID PRO 4.0 with the triggering of a lot of samples.
This didn't happen with my old soundcard (the stock soundcard on my machine). That card would only allow me to record at 16 bit 44.1Khz; is this a factor?
I've got a 2.5G Celeron processor with 512megs of Ram running Windows XP
I've got the DMA Buffer Size set at the highest setting- 2048 samples, and I'm recording at 24bit/48Khtz
Where should I start to troubleshoot? The buffer settings didn't seem to make much difference.
Thanks!
This didn't happen with my old soundcard (the stock soundcard on my machine). That card would only allow me to record at 16 bit 44.1Khz; is this a factor?
I've got a 2.5G Celeron processor with 512megs of Ram running Windows XP
I've got the DMA Buffer Size set at the highest setting- 2048 samples, and I'm recording at 24bit/48Khtz
Where should I start to troubleshoot? The buffer settings didn't seem to make much difference.
Thanks!
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Re: help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
Have you checked the driver settings in acid?
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Re: help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
Try playing with your buffer/latency settings. I'm pretty sure this is a feature on the 1010. Generally with soundcards, longer buffer=higher latency (in ms), but more solid performance, 'specially handling multiple sound-streams.
You might also see if your card's clock source is set funny (different from program to driver).
Further, check Acid's wave output config page. You may have a couple different drivers available to you. Check and see if there are any that fix the problem.
Oh, and in general its a pretty good idea to write down or grab screen caps of where config parameters were before you started messing with them, so that you have a zero state.
You might also see if your card's clock source is set funny (different from program to driver).
Further, check Acid's wave output config page. You may have a couple different drivers available to you. Check and see if there are any that fix the problem.
Oh, and in general its a pretty good idea to write down or grab screen caps of where config parameters were before you started messing with them, so that you have a zero state.
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Re: help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
Did you check and see if recording in 16-bit helped? Not that I'm advocating do so regularly, but doing some test recording narrow the shape and size of the prob is helpful.
Do you have a AGP video card or PCI?
Do you have a AGP video card or PCI?
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Re: help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
And he's triple-posting. What a l0s0r.
Also, have you tested any other audio programs to see if they work? 'Specially other DAW/sequencer/whatever progs that handle multiple audio streams are good to a/b against.
Also, have you tested any other audio programs to see if they work? 'Specially other DAW/sequencer/whatever progs that handle multiple audio streams are good to a/b against.
Re: help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
I have a very old, slow computer, and I set my latency (buffer) to the highest it can go... then I just monitor through my mixer and tracktion lines everything up perfectly for me. So far it's been very stable compared to before, when I had it on the lowest setting because I was afraid of latency.
- andrew embassy
- george martin
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Re: help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
I've got the latency set at 2048 (or something) samples, which works out to 10ms, I think, something like that.apropos of nothing wrote:Try playing with your buffer/latency settings. I'm pretty sure this is a feature on the 1010. Generally with soundcards, longer buffer=higher latency (in ms), but more solid performance, 'specially handling multiple sound-streams.
The clock is set to the card's internal clock, so I think that should be okay.apropos of nothing wrote: You might also see if your card's clock source is set funny (different from program to driver).
I'm not sure where to find this or what it does exactly- clarification?apropos of nothing wrote: Further, check Acid's wave output config page. You may have a couple different drivers available to you. Check and see if there are any that fix the problem.
Good idea : )apropos of nothing wrote: Oh, and in general its a pretty good idea to write down or grab screen caps of where config parameters were before you started messing with them, so that you have a zero state.
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- andrew embassy
- george martin
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Re: help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
I have a AGP card, but I went into windows settings and made the display performance as bare bones as possible and it seemed to really help things.apropos of nothing wrote:Did you check and see if recording in 16-bit helped? Not that I'm advocating do so regularly, but doing some test recording narrow the shape and size of the prob is helpful.
Do you have a AGP video card or PCI?
Would more RAM be in order? I've got 512 right now, should I be looking at upgrading to a gig or so?
Andrew
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Re: help me get my Delta 1010LT fine tuned?
Um, Options->Preferences->"Audio" tab.andrew embassy wrote:I'm not sure where to find this or what it does exactly- clarification?apropos of nothing wrote: Further, check Acid's wave output config page. You may have a couple different drivers available to you. Check and see if there are any that fix the problem.
On this page there are two relevant options. The first is "Audio playback buffering". Crank up that value and see if that helps.
The second is "Audio device type". There should be a couple of different driver options in there. Check and see if one of the others works better for ya.
More RAM never hurts, but I don't think its the issue in this case. 512 oughta be plenty.
Also, if you haven't done so, its not a bad idea to disable the onboard sound. In BIOS if you can, but certainly in Windows.
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