access virus c and fl studio 5
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Jason_R |
I rember a while back that someone awnsered the question of how to use an access virus with fl studio ( recording ). However despite searching a number of times for the thread / post / reply I just carn't find it so if someone could post a link to it I'd most greatful thanks! |
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Robbie Van Doe |
i wouldnt mind knowing to, ive got a feelin its something to do with disk record in the fx panel! |
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Luke Terry |
recording in fl is hopeless.
it's easier just to get fl to play the synth and record it in SF, you can then chop it to fit.
cubase + hardware = easier
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Derivative |
you have got to be kidding me. i hope to fu.cking christ thats supposed to be ironic.
recording from a synth in fl is incredibly easy.
step 1:
i assume your virus c is already hooked up to your audio interface correctly. start up fl studio and set your audio interface to a unique midi port. for the sake of arguement lets just say its midi port 1. in the step sequencer window, add a MIDI OUT plugin and set the port number to 1 and the channel number to 1.
you should still hear no sound at this point.
step 2:
open fruity's mixer and right at the bottom you will see an 'IN' tab and an 'OUT' tab. click on the IN tab and select the audio inputs that your virus is connected to. i have my virus b connected to my analogue ins 1 & 2. so i select 'delta 1010 audio in 1 & 2'
leave the output on master. if you set it to your audio outputs then your virus will playback twice and it will sound . to stop this you either mute playback in fruity's mixer (by leaving it on master) or mute your audio interface software mixer in the system tray.
step 3:
arm the mixer for recording. there should be a little disk icon in the bottom right hand corner of the mixer window. click it. it will open a 'save as' box. choose a location to save your wav. make sure that fruity is set to render to 32 bit floating point (*not* the 16.8 cooledit format) and turn dithering OFF.
when the mixer is armed the disk icon will be orange/yellow.
step 4:
go to the transport bar and arm the transport control by clicking on the record button. when you press play you will be counted in by a metronome and recording will begin. pressing stop will stop the recording. if you need to record another take, simply arm the mixer again and repeat step 3 and 4.
seriously couldnt be easier.
incidentally, this is all in THE GOD DAMN MANUAL. |
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Project 7 |
what!, you cant use hardware in realtime on Fl, what a load of bollocks
cubase is king |
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Luke Terry |
for some reasons i get skips + glitches when i record in fl, so i do it the long way lol
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Robbie Van Doe |
im still using fl5 still ,but i found out to record ma virus classic and jp-8000 in cubase sx2. |
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euphorion |
quote: | Originally posted by Project 7
what!, you cant use hardware in realtime on Fl, what a load of bollocks
cubase is king |
are you stupid? Ofcourse you can use hardware realtime in FL studio...
Jeezus are you retarded? :p |
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dj jasonF |
can you use fx in real time tho? when i open the in in the mixer i see no inputs for some reason |
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IDarkISwordI |
quote: | Originally posted by dj jasonF
can you use fx in real time tho? when i open the in in the mixer i see no inputs for some reason |
You have to be using an ASIO driver lol... |
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dj jasonF |
lol what??
i am using the kx asio drivers.. |
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IDarkISwordI |
Hey. If you have your driver in FLS set to your soundcard/soundcard driver, it WILL NOT allow you to input audio in real-time. Doing that would cause a loopback, aka feedback and that is definitely a bad thing. You have to make sure you have an ASIO driver such as asio4all or the Adobe ASIO driver and you MUST have it selected in the as the output device in the options panel. Trust me, it does work though. Ive done live stuff with a guitar running it through FX in FLS.
Cheers,
Zac |
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