W
Wurlitzer
New member
If anyone can lend a hand with this, I'll be mighty grateful. Its doing my head in.
I have a project consisting first of all of a number of MIDI tracks. Some of these are triggering plugin synths within Sonar, some are triggering a JV1080, and some are triggering Gigastudio running on a separate PC, via MIDIoverLAN, which are routed back to the main PC via TDIF.
I bounce the plugin tracks to audio using Sonar's internal facility for this. The resulting audio is in perfect sync with the MIDI.
I record the other tracks to audio by bringing them all in to my Mixtreme soundcard, and recording from there to new audio tracks in Sonar.
When I play these back, they are ever so slightly stretched, so they drift out of time with the MIDI tracks and the plugin-derived audio tracks. I say "ever so slightly" because for the first minute or so they sound fine, then they start to sound a bit funny, and by the end of the song (about five minutes) they are about a beat behind!
Its definitely the plugin-derived tracks that are correct - the audio hits line up with the MIDI beats they came from. I can actually see on the screen that the other, recorded audio tracks are about a beat too long.
Some more details & thoughts:
1. All the recorded audio tracks are perfectly in time WITH EACH OTHER. Thus it wouldn't seem to be a problem with the JV1080, the second PC or MIDIoverLAN, because if one of these were at fault I would hear it out of sync with the other one. No, everything is gathered together perfectly by the Mixtreme in the main PC, but its like its then given a different timecode or something that is slightly slower than the original timing.
2. It wouldn't seem to be a latency issue, because if it were then the audio would be a consistent amount late all the way through (wouldn't it?). But its not, its fine at the beginning then gradually gets worse. So its like every beat is turned into 1.001 beats, and the effect is cumulative.
3. I have Sonar set to audio clock, in accordance with the instructions in the manual for using MIDI and audio together.
4. I tried using FIT TO TIME to shrink the recorded audio but it wouldn't do it by such a small amount. At any rate, I know this is not a viable long-term solution.
HELP!
I have a project consisting first of all of a number of MIDI tracks. Some of these are triggering plugin synths within Sonar, some are triggering a JV1080, and some are triggering Gigastudio running on a separate PC, via MIDIoverLAN, which are routed back to the main PC via TDIF.
I bounce the plugin tracks to audio using Sonar's internal facility for this. The resulting audio is in perfect sync with the MIDI.
I record the other tracks to audio by bringing them all in to my Mixtreme soundcard, and recording from there to new audio tracks in Sonar.
When I play these back, they are ever so slightly stretched, so they drift out of time with the MIDI tracks and the plugin-derived audio tracks. I say "ever so slightly" because for the first minute or so they sound fine, then they start to sound a bit funny, and by the end of the song (about five minutes) they are about a beat behind!
Its definitely the plugin-derived tracks that are correct - the audio hits line up with the MIDI beats they came from. I can actually see on the screen that the other, recorded audio tracks are about a beat too long.
Some more details & thoughts:
1. All the recorded audio tracks are perfectly in time WITH EACH OTHER. Thus it wouldn't seem to be a problem with the JV1080, the second PC or MIDIoverLAN, because if one of these were at fault I would hear it out of sync with the other one. No, everything is gathered together perfectly by the Mixtreme in the main PC, but its like its then given a different timecode or something that is slightly slower than the original timing.
2. It wouldn't seem to be a latency issue, because if it were then the audio would be a consistent amount late all the way through (wouldn't it?). But its not, its fine at the beginning then gradually gets worse. So its like every beat is turned into 1.001 beats, and the effect is cumulative.
3. I have Sonar set to audio clock, in accordance with the instructions in the manual for using MIDI and audio together.
4. I tried using FIT TO TIME to shrink the recorded audio but it wouldn't do it by such a small amount. At any rate, I know this is not a viable long-term solution.
HELP!