by Jerm » Thu Sep 13, 2007 10:13 am
Well I guess this is confusing because there are two different kinds of latency.
The first is the latency from the time you press a key on your keyboard to the time a sound is produced from your computer's audio output device. This latency is completely under control of the 'audio packet size' plus the time it takes for your MIDI device to transmit MIDI data to the computer. This latency exists for all plug-ins.
The second latency, which I will call internal latency, is what I was referring to here in this thread. This is the time it takes for a plug-in to convert MIDI data to audio data. In the effects window, if you right-click (or control-click) on the rack you can 'get-info' on a plug-in and a dialog will show you the plug-ins current latency. Note that Metro has 'latency compensation' which makes sure (in most cases) that the audio is correctly aligned.
Some plug-ins with notable latency are 'Access Virus TI', 'PSP Vintage Warmer', 'NI Vokator', 'Apple:AUTimePitch', 'Apple:AUPeaklimiter' , 'UHE Zebra2'.
Note that the last two I mention have very little latency (88 and 16 samples) respectively. In the case where the latency is very low you might not notice this problem with subsections. Just be sure to expand the subsection before the final mix.