Hi not strictly Pulsar related but this is a problem a mate of mine is having, but wondered if any of you wonderful people could help!
"When recording vinyl into soundforge - sounds fine going in. When i played back
the wav there were skips or missing beats - sounding like the record was
jumping but wasn't. I would describe it like my processor was not keeping up
or was glitching when recording - could be performance problem maybe?
When i play my own loops in reason or cubase sometimes it pauses - almost
waiting for pc to catch up - I wonder if this is part of the same problem???
Was fine and never jumped until i had a new hard drive installed and had to
reinstall all my software??? Configuration maybe - no other parts of my pc
have been changed"
If anyone could shed any light on this I would be very grateful, he is running XP
Audio glitches after new HD install
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- Posts: 1963
- Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2003 4:00 pm
- Location: Bath, England
You mean for master/slave? Unlikely, AFAIK a drive just won't be seen by the system if that's set-up incorrectly.
My suspicion would be the HDD, though...there's no guarantee that a brand new one is actually working properly. My development PC at work was always behaving like a mule with a bad attitude until the SMART registers finally reached a high enough count to inform me, "Your HDD is about to explode, back-up all your data now or lose it!"
The HDD had been dodgy right from the beginning, changing it has improved my system no end.
Hd Tach is a good, free way of measuring your HDDs performance, you can get it from here:
http://www.simplisoftware.com/Public/in ... est=HdTach
"HD Tach will test the sequential read, random access and interface burst speeds of your attached storage device", which may help to show if there's a problem there.
For HDD diagnostic software, I'd need to know the manufacturer of your HDD (as most diagnostic tools are vendor-specific), but there are some good ones out there.
Try running both of DiskCheckup and ActiveSmart from:
http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm? ... 583&page=7
They get the SMART info about your drive and compare that to "its ideal profile".
HTH,
Royston
My suspicion would be the HDD, though...there's no guarantee that a brand new one is actually working properly. My development PC at work was always behaving like a mule with a bad attitude until the SMART registers finally reached a high enough count to inform me, "Your HDD is about to explode, back-up all your data now or lose it!"
The HDD had been dodgy right from the beginning, changing it has improved my system no end.
Hd Tach is a good, free way of measuring your HDDs performance, you can get it from here:
http://www.simplisoftware.com/Public/in ... est=HdTach
"HD Tach will test the sequential read, random access and interface burst speeds of your attached storage device", which may help to show if there's a problem there.
For HDD diagnostic software, I'd need to know the manufacturer of your HDD (as most diagnostic tools are vendor-specific), but there are some good ones out there.
Try running both of DiskCheckup and ActiveSmart from:
http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm? ... 583&page=7
They get the SMART info about your drive and compare that to "its ideal profile".
HTH,
Royston