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Audio Stutters - Windows 7 & Live 8 (pg. 2)
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Nick Cenik
quote:
Originally posted by cryophonik
That's a good bet. I would start with your FW card and make sure that it has a TI chipset - if it doesn't, that is most likely your problem.


Will you please elaborate a bit on the TI chip-set issue?

-How do I tell if my mobo has a TI chip-set?
-Why is it important to have the TI chip-set?
Etc.

Cheers!
Nick Cenik
**Edit:

A quick search on Google suggests that the TI is most preferred b/c it supposedly supports the greatest variety of FW audio cards.

**Edit 2:

Considering that Device Manager reports "VIA 1394 OHCI Compliant Host Controller" under "IEEE 1394 Bus host controllers", I take it my mobo does not have the TI chipset.

Hmm, so I guess the first step is to install something like this --> http://www.pcpartscollection.com/tichpcitofii.html and then disable the mobo's oboard FW? Do you guys have any recommendations re: some of the 'best' PCI TI to Firewire cards?

Cheers!
Mad for Brad
are you going to post your setup or are we to imagine what you are using to fix your problem. List your components ffs. Chances are you issues has very little to do with your overall cpu power. Upgrading is incredibly stupid if you don't know what the problem is in the first place.

as far as best, there aren't really best. It either has a Texas Instrument chip or it doesn't. You won't find that many choices. But for the love of god, post your setup specs.
Nick Cenik
quote:
Originally posted by Mad for Brad
post your setup specs.


Windows 7 64bit
Intel Core 2 Duo E6550 @ 2.33Ghz
ASUS P5K-VM (VIA 1394 OHCI Compliant Host Controller)
Echo AudioFire 4
4Gb DDR Ram
Ableton Live 8.14

What else would be helpful to know?
Pagan-za
quote:
Originally posted by EddieZilker
If this is stupid, let me know, but my thinking just now was that the settings on the sound-card's driver and the project settings weren't in agreement. If the sound-card driver was set to 48,000 Hz but your project rate was 96K, could that cause the issue?


Not a stupid question at all. Ableton renders audio in real-time, and it changes all samples to the project settings. If there are lots of different sample rates being used it does cause a bit of a lag. There is also an option to save the sample in RAM instead of on the HDD, trying to load too many will cause it to stutter when the disk load gets too high.

Freezing a track works well, will save a bit of CPU load as it precomputes all the calculations and just plays it back again.

Also, Mad for Brad was correct on all points there, they all major issues.


I'm busy sorting out my second HDD at the moment to be my music OS, I'm going to reinstall XP on it and strip it down, install absolutely nothing except my music software, and planning for it to access the first drive for samples and things. Should help reduce my load quite a bit. Next thing I need though is a decent soundcard.
kitphillips
quote:
Originally posted by Nick Cenik
I've used the native AudioFire drivers (always the latest updates) for the past 2 or 3 years. They perform more poorly than ASIO4All - surprising, I know!


I'd say that this is an issue... So are you monitoring through your onboard sound then or using the ECHO with the ASIO4ALL..? The card's drivers should be the best to use for it, you don't buy a card for hundreds of dollars just so you have to use ASIO4ALL IMO.
Lucidity
quote:
Originally posted by kitphillips
I'd say that this is an issue... So are you monitoring through your onboard sound then or using the ECHO with the ASIO4ALL..? The card's drivers should be the best to use for it, you don't buy a card for hundreds of dollars just so you have to use ASIO4ALL IMO.

May be a stupid question, but, when you used the "native" drivers, did you use the direct sound or the asio drivers. You don't wanna use direct sound.
tehlord
The E6550 is possibly the cuplrit, although that depends on what exactly was running when the track got busy. Is it mostly VST, audio, do you have any CPU intensive look ahead mastering plugins running?

Another culprit could be the buffer settings on the ASIO driver (the soundcard drivers really should perform better than ASIO4all). I suspect a lot of the issue is there. You not mentioned them so I suspect they've not been optimised.
19503
quote:
Originally posted by EddieZilker
If this is stupid, let me know, but my thinking just now was that the settings on the sound-card's driver and the project settings weren't in agreement. If the sound-card driver was set to 48,000 Hz but your project rate was 96K, could that cause the issue?

this is why you should use the Echo driver. because then Ableton is master and whatever settings u set up there will be automaticly adjusted in the driver for the soundcard. when opening up the Echo sound-manager thing u cant adjust anything because Ableton is in control and the settings with therefore always match. Asio4All sucks imo and should only be used when using internal MOBO soundcards. I would do both that and get a PCI with Texas firewire chipset. U might as well go for firewire 800 (1394b) incase u need that in the future. Oh and u might wanna disable the MOBO soundcard too in device manager!

my tip concluded:
- Get TI chipset Firewire card (1394b).
- Uninstall Asio4All and use Echo Asio drivers (Ableton will then occupy all sound, and youtube etc wont work while producing).
- Disable MOBO soundcard and firewire.
- Work 16bit 44.1kHz and latency at 512 or 1024 frames (this seemed to work best at my old crap computer).

Should do the trick. Again im so glad i switched to mac lol, coreaudio is great.
Derivative
Download DPC Latency Checker. If you get lots of red spikes then your firewire chipset sucks. If you are on a laptop and you can't replace your firewire chipset you may need to disable pretty much everything that makes your PC a multimedia hub (camera, keyboard backlight, wireless etc).

Nick Cenik
Okay, to address a number of the above posts:

-I'm using very few VTSs these days; the vast majority of all my sounds are samples (one-shots + loops). The stutters happen when there is a ton of automation happening (e.g. sending many channels to reverbs on BUS channels) and lots of clips playing at once.
-When I would use the Audiofire 4, Sample rate in the Echo control panel is 44.1kHz w/ a Buffer size of 512 (increasing Buffer size doesn't help).
-24-bit selected for Sample rate in Live's preferences.
-Direct sound in Live is never selected.

quote:
Originally posted by 19503
my tip concluded:
- Get TI chipset Firewire card (1394b).
- Uninstall Asio4All and use Echo Asio drivers (Ableton will then occupy all sound, and youtube etc wont work while producing).
- Disable MOBO soundcard and firewire.
- Work 16bit 44.1kHz and latency at 512 or 1024 frames (this seemed to work best at my old crap computer).


These are exactly the steps I plan to take! I'll report back once the new setup is established.

Thank you sincerely for all the help guys :)
kitphillips
quote:
Originally posted by Derivative
Download DPC Latency Checker. If you get lots of red spikes then your firewire chipset sucks. If you are on a laptop and you can't replace your firewire chipset you may need to disable pretty much everything that makes your PC a multimedia hub (camera, keyboard backlight, wireless etc).


Yeah or get a PCMCIA firewire card.

@ the OP: Send an email to echo, its really their problem. You shouldn't be getting stutters with your setup. Maybe they have a forum you can post in? It sounds like a hardware issue either way.
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