F
fdsaevad
New member
i use studio one 2 pro and native instruments guitar rig 5, but this is just a general question.
playing guitar through guitar rig really drains the cpu, i can really only get 4 tracks recorded with guitar rig on them before i have to start 'transforming to rendered audio'
i thought i had figured out a way to bypass this issue by running multiple tracks with the same guitar sound through an FX channel that had guitar rig on it. so essentially then i i could run 8 tracks of the same guitar effect and only use up the equivalent of one guitar rig cpu power.
but i noticed that the actual track is playing the clean guitar in behind everything, and i got to wondering, well what is the point of an FX channel if the unaltered track feeding it also plays? turning down the track affects the input of the FX channel and thus the sound of the FX guitar.
what is the point of an FX channel if the clean track plays right in behind it?
(if you could add as a sidenote what the point of a Bus channel is too that'd be nice, but i can look that up in the manual easily enough).
playing guitar through guitar rig really drains the cpu, i can really only get 4 tracks recorded with guitar rig on them before i have to start 'transforming to rendered audio'
i thought i had figured out a way to bypass this issue by running multiple tracks with the same guitar sound through an FX channel that had guitar rig on it. so essentially then i i could run 8 tracks of the same guitar effect and only use up the equivalent of one guitar rig cpu power.
but i noticed that the actual track is playing the clean guitar in behind everything, and i got to wondering, well what is the point of an FX channel if the unaltered track feeding it also plays? turning down the track affects the input of the FX channel and thus the sound of the FX guitar.
what is the point of an FX channel if the clean track plays right in behind it?
(if you could add as a sidenote what the point of a Bus channel is too that'd be nice, but i can look that up in the manual easily enough).