![]() And while they are supposedly a very reputable company, I'm not sure their driver is on par with RME. The track count is huge, and even if most of them are muted and not visible, I do believe they impact the CPU performance.Īlso my soundcard is the Aurora(n). I'll try Latency checker anyway, thanks ! Overall I think my CPU could be a killer CPU for anybody working on regular-sized Reaper project, the only thing is I'm way past the threshold of normal-sized project. I will look into the Glitch free e-booklet thanks ! Is lantency checker an equivalent to Latmon & Dpclat ? These are the two softwares I use to check on latency. My CPU hates me (I hear it, late at night, insulting me). I run thousands of tracks at the same time. SInce then, my workflow has changes drastically. Same thing as you, I need Thunderbolt, so at the time (three years ago) I went for an Intel : I had done it. It's been a long time since I've tuned Windows 10, and many updates may have turned back on all the crap that you're suposed to turn off. Right now the situation seems ok reagrding latency. It's often the Nvidia driver that caused this. Once in a while there is a spike that transform the result into "not being suitable", but it happens once in 15 minutes. Latency monitoring softwares (Latmon and Dpclat) say that my computer is "ok for real time audio". Maybe my graphic card driver and network drivers have a bad influence indeed. I haven't considered AMD so far because I've needed Thunderbolt, but now that it seems like most AMD motherboards will have TB going forwards, I might go for a AMD : thx for your answer. When I upgrade to a new machine I'll probably go for a 12th gen Intel (or 13th, if they are out by then). I haven't seen any reviews of the 12th gen hybrid processors for Reaper specifically, but they are supposed to work insanely well for a DAW setup in general. I have Windows power settings set to high performance so the processor pretty much never dips below 4 GHz. ![]() Audio drivers have a substantial impact on how well your processor handles low buffer sizes as well, so maybe that's why your system isn't handling it well? It could also be that other drivers (network card drivers i.e) are interfering with your systems capability to process real-time audio. I use 64-128ms buffer size without any problems whatsoever (RME Babyface Pro FS interface). It works absolutely great, even though it's not that powerful. ![]() I'm using a Intel NUC with a i7-8559u (4-core/8-thread) that has a base clock of 2.71 GHz and max turbo of 4.5 Ghz. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |