Got it
This Creamware stuff is really great. The only way to fully understand it is to go step by step with the manual. While other manufacturers are forcing their products upon home recordist promising big upgrades to their TDM system I can see now that Creamware is it. Keep it up. I am a bit sorry now that I did not buy a Pulsar 11 instead of a Luna Card. What can I add to Luna11?
I have to tell ya - if you like Luna you'll love Pulsar. I outgrew Luna within a couple of months. And the Pulsar app seems more stable to me - probably because it's been around longer. That may all change with the next gen of upgrades.
I stongly suggest you consider Pulsar as the next upgrade option. Pulsar and Luna work together just fine and you'll get all the extra cool tools that Pulsar provides. Just my humble opinion
I stongly suggest you consider Pulsar as the next upgrade option. Pulsar and Luna work together just fine and you'll get all the extra cool tools that Pulsar provides. Just my humble opinion
I use Acid 3.0, but I think the idea here is the same: your audio goes to the wave destination - that's good. And of course you want to hear the waves playback so you pull the wave source into your project. But if the wave source is inserted into the audio chain like a normal instrument then that audio stream will be output again to the wave destination !
The answer is to make sure your wave source is routed ONLY to the audio out. You could do this at the end of the chain by using a little submixer: your main mix out goes to the wave destination and to the submixer. Your wave source also goes to the submixer. the outputs of the submixer go to the audio outs. There are other methods too, but this is - I think - reasonably intuitive.
Hope this is clear !
The answer is to make sure your wave source is routed ONLY to the audio out. You could do this at the end of the chain by using a little submixer: your main mix out goes to the wave destination and to the submixer. Your wave source also goes to the submixer. the outputs of the submixer go to the audio outs. There are other methods too, but this is - I think - reasonably intuitive.
Hope this is clear !