Hi folks! I am having a weird latency issue. Namely, I am in the middle of a dubbing recording process, which means long recording sessions with one VO talent at a time. Everything is running more or less smoothly, exept for latency in monitoring, that occurs a couple of times a day totally at random. Sometimes ticking the "low latency monitoring" off and then on again helps, but occasionally I have to restart both PT and Digi to get rid of it. I could live with that, but not the talent, for whom this issue makes working virtually impossible There's another issue that may be connected to the one discribed above. I have routed the VO channel to output 1, for obvious reasons . Sometimes, when opening a project and record enabling the VO track, there's no sound on the output, though PT's meter shows the signal, as the talent speaks. In order to get this fixed, I need to switch the track's output to whatever other output for a second and then back to aoutput 1. What to make of all this? Are these issues related to PT or the hardware? Thanks in advance, Danek
Have you fixed this problem? If not, it sounds like it could be a clock issue. Check your settings in Setup>Hardware> and assuming you don't have an external clock source, make sure your clock source is set to internal. Hope this helps, Miker84
Could it be...the dreaded power harness issue? Have you replaced the power harness on this 002? Voltage starved circuits can do all kinds of neat stuff like that. If your machine is powerful enough, try recording with a hardware buffer setting of 64 for a while when LLM won't come back, until you get a break to restart. The latency with that setting is so short that the talent should be able to get used to it pretty quickly. Have them try with one ear off and a little lower volume so they're hearing themselves louder in real time than with the delayed signal, but can still hear enough of the track/TB for reference. Other suggestions: 1. Instead of apologizing to the talent, try convincing them that it's all in their head. 2. Tell them they need to talk slower until the recorded voice catches up to the real one. 3. Fire them and get real pros who are willing to work under any conditions. The wait staff of any Nashville restaurant, for example.
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Estonian! How wonderful! This is a long shot, but there have been known to be one or two bizarre bugs related to Windows language settings that only affected people using something other than US English - which, naturally, is what is used on almost all computers during programming and testing. It might pay to explore that possibility here. Not very likely, but it's the only thing I can think of.
Whoow, now that sounds t o o bizarre to be taken seriously! Voodoo rather than a bug :O Might still give it a try though..? P.S. Can you actually discribe a bug related to language settings? I mean, hey, it just seems so... whoow... impossible..?