After trying every suggestion people have made...
Moderators: Acoustica Greg, Acoustica Eric, Acoustica Dan, rsaintjohn
After trying every suggestion people have made...
I am wondering if it could have something to do with how I have my guitar hooked up to my PC. I am running out of the line-out from my amp into the microphone jack on the back...could this be a problem and if so, what do I need to do ??
Actually, you should be running to the line-in of your sound card as the line-out out of your amp is a preamped source which is usually not compatible with the mic input of a sound card.
The amount of latency you are hearing is huge. Is Mixcraft set to record from your sound card (check the settings in Mixcraft)?
The amount of latency you are hearing is huge. Is Mixcraft set to record from your sound card (check the settings in Mixcraft)?
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Mono is what you want, use a microphone to mic the amp, and plug it into the mic input of the sound card. The latency problem may go away after this because you would then not be using the pc speakers to hear your guitar, you would be using the amp which has no latency from speaker to ear.
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Tried all that...The biggest issue which no one can seem to figure out is not so much the latency, but the pitch. I connected my microphone and sang a line. Then I overdubbed the exact same verse and the 2nd one is a bit slower and the pitch is a bit lower...this is the same problem I have been having when trying to record guitar harmonies. I am questioning if I am just not going to be able to use this,
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Don't give up, it's well worth it when you get it working
Try going into Mixcrafts preferences and setting the devices to your specific sound card, not "default wave device".
also, change the sample rate and bit depth to 44100 and 16 bit in both the recording and playback tabs.
Also make sure the stereo button is selected in these tabs.
See if that helps.
Try going into Mixcrafts preferences and setting the devices to your specific sound card, not "default wave device".
also, change the sample rate and bit depth to 44100 and 16 bit in both the recording and playback tabs.
Also make sure the stereo button is selected in these tabs.
See if that helps.
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All my music is made with Mixcraft!
Eric Band (Infamous Quick) Site
Eric On YouTube
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Eric On Soundcloud
Eric On Reverbnation
All my music is made with Mixcraft!
Eric Band (Infamous Quick) Site
Eric On YouTube
Eric On Facebook
Eric On Soundcloud
Eric On Reverbnation
- Acoustica Eric
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They may, if you use 16 bit instead of 24, your pc does not have to work so hard and your latency may go away.
Mixcraft is not the cause of the latency problem, it is more likely your computer or soundcard.
Can you list your pc specs for me?
Mixcraft is not the cause of the latency problem, it is more likely your computer or soundcard.
Can you list your pc specs for me?
Acoustica Support
All my music is made with Mixcraft!
Eric Band (Infamous Quick) Site
Eric On YouTube
Eric On Facebook
Eric On Soundcloud
Eric On Reverbnation
All my music is made with Mixcraft!
Eric Band (Infamous Quick) Site
Eric On YouTube
Eric On Facebook
Eric On Soundcloud
Eric On Reverbnation
OK, I just experienced the craziest thing ! I took the bit depth down to 8bits and the sample rate to 32000. I recorded a guitar track and then overdubbed a harmony on top of it. It played back in perfect sync. I then imported a drum pattern and then layed a guitar track over that and wouldn't you know, out of sync again. Now if I record the 2 guitar tracks again, the 2nd one will play back at almost half the speed of the first...this is soooo frustrating !!!
Your right your issue is latency. Latency can be reduced but almost never eliminated. Mixcraft is comunicating with your sound card via the standard driver. Generally what is used for audio production are ASIO drivers. They are specifically designed for audio software and hardware communication to reduce latency. I don't know the complete technical explanation, but someone here may. However the current version of Mixcraft does not support ASIO drivers. From what i have been reading 3.0 will.
Some things you can do:
Purchase a dedicated sound card. Doesn't have to be fancy, anything is better than onboard audio.
More Ram
Terminate all unecessary processi's, do this via Ctrl+Alt+Delete
More Ram
Change bit and sample to 16 and 44.1 repectively. 24/96 sounds nice but if your burning a CD it all gets downsampled to 16/44.1. Downsampling can introduce anomalies.
And if i haven't mentioned yet, More Ram. You can never have too much.
Hope this helps.
Nemasis
Some things you can do:
Purchase a dedicated sound card. Doesn't have to be fancy, anything is better than onboard audio.
More Ram
Terminate all unecessary processi's, do this via Ctrl+Alt+Delete
More Ram
Change bit and sample to 16 and 44.1 repectively. 24/96 sounds nice but if your burning a CD it all gets downsampled to 16/44.1. Downsampling can introduce anomalies.
And if i haven't mentioned yet, More Ram. You can never have too much.
Hope this helps.
Nemasis