![]() ![]() Also just clicking certain buttons there is a noticeable lag. Scrolling up and down, selecting and dragging the audio waveform, zooming in and out is sometimes just painfully slow. Kinda like the way I feel sometimes.Īny and all advice appreciated. This is especially bad when working on multiple tracks at once. I'm wondering if my computer is too old and slow for what is being asked of it. I have 1.00GB of memory, 1.9Ghz processor speed, a 120 g 5,400rpm hard drive and a Sound Blaster Audigy sound card. I am working on a 6 year old Dell laptop, running Windows Vista. I understand that the Line 6 gives me all these different amp sounds but what do I hear when I play along with the backing track and will I hear it "in time"? Line 6 claim that their devices fix latency issues, but won't I still have a latency problem with audacity just like I have now since that is where the two sound sources, the backing track and my guitar, come together? So now I'm looking at getting a Line 6 UXI 1 or 2 as my input device. I don't seem to be able to correct the latency issue by fiddling around with the settings in Audacity. I have tried just plugging the guitar into the mic input of my computer and can get the guitar sound to balance with the backing track but the latency makes it impossible to play in time. I have tried to record just with the mic in my monitor, playing over the backing track from my audio system but the resulting sound quality on the playback is terrible. You might also look at a different recording software. I dont use Audacity for recording, but the Instructions are in instruction manual. ![]() That way you dont continually build lag with multiple tracks. I have gone through most of the posts on this forum to understand how to record. There is an adjustment in Audacity where it will automatically compensate the recording of the new track. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |