Snap Crackle and Pop

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lowpass
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Snap Crackle and Pop

Post by lowpass » Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:00 pm

when rendering audio from acid, I occasionally get little crackles and pops actually recorded to the audio file, not sure why this is happening. My soundcard is just a cheap built in to motherboard one, could this be my problem?

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blunt-dmo
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Post by blunt-dmo » Fri Jan 30, 2009 11:51 pm

if you are using an on board sound card make sure you are using enough samples as if you go too low for to achieve better latency the wdm drivers tent to get pissed and start spitting at you.

you could try using asio4all drivers which will help
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ilioz
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Post by ilioz » Sat Jan 31, 2009 12:21 am

Blunt-DMO wrote:if you are using an on board sound card make sure you are using enough samples as if you go too low for to achieve better latency the wdm drivers tent to get pissed and start spitting at you.

you could try using asio4all drivers which will help
^this one but I`m afraid that your integrated soundcircuit doesn`t support asio at all.. so investing to decent soundcard fixes your problem and many others..:wink:

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Maree-Jaine
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Post by Maree-Jaine » Sat Jan 31, 2009 11:06 am

I use on board sound at the moment and the ASIO drivers work like a badman for me... If you aint had a go at using the ASIO yet, give it a try if you have the option, it might sort it...don't forget to turn the buffer thing up.
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ta7
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Post by ta7 » Sat Jan 31, 2009 2:13 pm

Its been a while since I used Acid. If your samples are clean, then it could well be down to the drivers. If Acid supports ASIO then use ASIO4ALL (http://www.asio4all.com/) like blunt said. Windows WDM is a really basic interface mainly used to trigger sounds from applications (like the error noise and friends) and without a decent buffer layer it can glitch quite easily under low load.

Also, if your onboard sound is an AC97 variant (the most common on board chip) remember to update to the latest windows drivers as well. ASIO4ALL loves the AC97.
^this one but I`m afraid that your integrated soundcircuit doesn`t support asio at all.. so investing to decent soundcard fixes your problem and many others..Wink
ASIO is a layer on top of the WDM. All soundcards that support WDM in Windows are ASIO compatible. A new soundcard would be the best option.[/code]

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oblivious
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Post by oblivious » Sat Jan 31, 2009 5:29 pm

TA7 wrote: Windows WDM is a really basic interface .[/code]
i thought it was the other way around, that WDM adds alot of extra process before it plays the sound, and that asio was good becasue it gets rid of all that unwanted stuff.

for example i hear that microsoft added all kinds of wierd process things to bypass copyrights that apple actually got rights to. like rendering sounds backwards and then shifting them around before playing them,
or is that Wav vs Aiff im thinking about?
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b-lam
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Post by b-lam » Sat Jan 31, 2009 7:23 pm

lol, when i saw the thread title I thought it was gonna be a thread about making vinyl-esque crackles from rice crispies :lol:

Actually not a bad idea

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blunt-dmo
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Post by blunt-dmo » Sat Jan 31, 2009 8:28 pm

Oblivious wrote:
TA7 wrote: Windows WDM is a really basic interface .[/code]
i thought it was the other way around, that WDM adds alot of extra process before it plays the sound, and that asio was good becasue it gets rid of all that unwanted stuff.

for example i hear that microsoft added all kinds of wierd process things to bypass copyrights that apple actually got rights to. like rendering sounds backwards and then shifting them around before playing them,
or is that Wav vs Aiff im thinking about?
partially

the native WDM's are not designed for music recording and tend to collapse when hit with busy plugins and samples if the samplerate and buffer is too low.
they are designed to handle generic windows tasks and movies/games/audio playback where latency is not an issue as its a complete file its playing back rather than segments.

always use asio unless you cant for some reason (driver issues)
asio4all is good for people without dedicated soundcards as it doesnt interfere with the drivers already present and can be assignable by your DAW's
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drokkr
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Post by drokkr » Sun Feb 01, 2009 1:51 am

Toni wrote:I use on board sound at the moment and the ASIO drivers work like a badman for me...
+1

FSTZ1
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Post by FSTZ1 » Sun Feb 01, 2009 9:17 am

save your chips for an asio card srsly

DX drivers are like driving with bald tires

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