
WATYF
...happier than you.
O.K... So here's the deal. Up to this point I have used Delta's "Monitor Mixer"....... as a monitor. (go figger..
) My mic runs straight into the card and straight back out of the card into my cans, and the playback runs straight from the card into my cans.. So, while I'm recording, I can hear myself, and the previously recorded tracks. Well, it ends up you aren't really supposed to record like that... (once again,.. go figger
) What I should be doing is using the "Live" playback while recording, so I can hear the music being played back, and my voice (with the effects applied to it) exactly as it's gonna sound when it gets recorded.
I tried that method out for the first time last night... and.. well.. it works great... (yet another, "go figger"
) but now I have a problem.. now that I'm no longer using my "make-shift" method of monitoring, (which I can't even remember how I figured out
) I have to deal with the dreaded "latencies".
Basically, I'm a little confused. Not so much aboot "what are latencies" or "how do you set them"... because it's pretty darn easy to set them in n-Track... my main confusion is... "how do all these people with PII500's and AMD K6's get anywhere when it comes to recording...????
I have an Athlon XP 1900+. It is fast. (as if I needed to tell you that..
) I has one of the fastest mobos in its class (soyo dragon plus).. it has one of the fastest HD's in its class (Maxtor D740X series) and so on and so forth... but... it can't handle even the decent latencies...
What's the deal?!?!?
In order to get truly instantaneous "playback" of what you say into the mic, I have to set my latencies down to 64 or 128 (with 2 buffers). But if I do that, I can only handle recording while listening to one track.. and once I've recorded the second track... n-Track can't handle playing both of them back (with a few effects on each channel). I get pops and clicks and then eventually it says that it had to stop playback to avoid a crash. Before messing with latencies, I would record and mix songs, routinely, with 10+ tracks in em.. (and with plenty of plugins applied to every single track), but now I can barely eek my way through two.
So, my question is two-fold. 1) How do I set latencies so that they give me a truly "live" monitor of what I'm saying into the mic (none of that millisecond delay crap) and allow me to listen to a large number of tracks during playback? and 2) How in theeeee heeeeeell can people with slower computers even use latencies??? Do they use something else? do they not hear what's going into the mic at all, and just not use monitoring?? *egad* I sure would like to know... cause I thought my system was "smokin" until I started messing with these latencies.
WATYF
P.S. Yes,.. I am cross-posting this because I'm not sure if it's an "n-Track specific" issue, so I want more input from average computer recorders too.


I tried that method out for the first time last night... and.. well.. it works great... (yet another, "go figger"


Basically, I'm a little confused. Not so much aboot "what are latencies" or "how do you set them"... because it's pretty darn easy to set them in n-Track... my main confusion is... "how do all these people with PII500's and AMD K6's get anywhere when it comes to recording...????


What's the deal?!?!?
In order to get truly instantaneous "playback" of what you say into the mic, I have to set my latencies down to 64 or 128 (with 2 buffers). But if I do that, I can only handle recording while listening to one track.. and once I've recorded the second track... n-Track can't handle playing both of them back (with a few effects on each channel). I get pops and clicks and then eventually it says that it had to stop playback to avoid a crash. Before messing with latencies, I would record and mix songs, routinely, with 10+ tracks in em.. (and with plenty of plugins applied to every single track), but now I can barely eek my way through two.
So, my question is two-fold. 1) How do I set latencies so that they give me a truly "live" monitor of what I'm saying into the mic (none of that millisecond delay crap) and allow me to listen to a large number of tracks during playback? and 2) How in theeeee heeeeeell can people with slower computers even use latencies??? Do they use something else? do they not hear what's going into the mic at all, and just not use monitoring?? *egad* I sure would like to know... cause I thought my system was "smokin" until I started messing with these latencies.
WATYF
P.S. Yes,.. I am cross-posting this because I'm not sure if it's an "n-Track specific" issue, so I want more input from average computer recorders too.