L
Lomitus
New member
Hello All!
I am new to these forums so thanks in advance for your patience and wisdom.
I'm relativly new to the world of Cakewalk and will probably have many questions as I go here. I"m running CWPA 9...given to me by a friend when he upgraded to Sonar (but he kept the freakin manual). I'm running this on a Duron 700 with 512 megs of RAM, (2) 20 gig harddrives, Win98 SE, etc., etc., etc.. I'm getting a solid 20 tracks with plently of effects off it without too many problems.
My first question is...and this isn't really a problem as much as an anoyance...is there any way to perminatly turn of the freakin metronome while recording? I have to go in and turn it off every time I start a new project and this is getting somewhat tiresome. I don' t use the metronome itself as I use a small beat machine to set up my scratch tracks (old Boss DR220...works like a charm for me). I have looked thru the help files, but didn't find anything in regards to this. Is there an .ini file or something that I can put in the initialization settings that will turn this annoying little bugger off permanatly?
My Second question...and of greater importance is; Can someone explain in relative detail the best way to set the buffer settings in CWPA (for this system)? There seems to be little to nothing about this either in the help file. I would like to get these tweaked, but don't want to sit there and just blindly play with them. The person I had gotten the program from had tweaked them out pretty well when we installed it, but do to a recent system crash, I lost all of the tweaks and the person is now out of state and I have no way to get ahold of him to ask what he had done? I haven't had a problem -yet- with the default parameters, but the current project I'm working on is only around 12 tracks so far and I'm afraid that as I add more later that I might run into problems. I had this problem when I used to run N-track as well...never was able to get the buffers quite tweaked for optimum performance (N-track...some very nice features, but the bugs rendered it pretty unusable...every now and then it would write eronious data to my audio tracks...which is why I'm using CWPA now).
I'm greatful for any assistance!
Jim Walczak
I am new to these forums so thanks in advance for your patience and wisdom.
I'm relativly new to the world of Cakewalk and will probably have many questions as I go here. I"m running CWPA 9...given to me by a friend when he upgraded to Sonar (but he kept the freakin manual). I'm running this on a Duron 700 with 512 megs of RAM, (2) 20 gig harddrives, Win98 SE, etc., etc., etc.. I'm getting a solid 20 tracks with plently of effects off it without too many problems.
My first question is...and this isn't really a problem as much as an anoyance...is there any way to perminatly turn of the freakin metronome while recording? I have to go in and turn it off every time I start a new project and this is getting somewhat tiresome. I don' t use the metronome itself as I use a small beat machine to set up my scratch tracks (old Boss DR220...works like a charm for me). I have looked thru the help files, but didn't find anything in regards to this. Is there an .ini file or something that I can put in the initialization settings that will turn this annoying little bugger off permanatly?
My Second question...and of greater importance is; Can someone explain in relative detail the best way to set the buffer settings in CWPA (for this system)? There seems to be little to nothing about this either in the help file. I would like to get these tweaked, but don't want to sit there and just blindly play with them. The person I had gotten the program from had tweaked them out pretty well when we installed it, but do to a recent system crash, I lost all of the tweaks and the person is now out of state and I have no way to get ahold of him to ask what he had done? I haven't had a problem -yet- with the default parameters, but the current project I'm working on is only around 12 tracks so far and I'm afraid that as I add more later that I might run into problems. I had this problem when I used to run N-track as well...never was able to get the buffers quite tweaked for optimum performance (N-track...some very nice features, but the bugs rendered it pretty unusable...every now and then it would write eronious data to my audio tracks...which is why I'm using CWPA now).
I'm greatful for any assistance!
Jim Walczak