On OS 9, if the sound is really choppy, the most common reason is you are outputting to two different audio devices. To remedy this, use the change ports dialog to change all audio ports to the same device as specified in the digital audio setup dialog. Other common problems can be remedied by setting buffer sizes properly. Buffer sizes can be changed in both the Digital Audio Setup advanced dialog and in the Buffers Pane of the preferences dialog. Audio files are usually large and can easily cause playback and/or recording problems for many computers. Problems occur most frequently when you try to monitor already-recorded audio tracks while you record new ones. Your computer tries to both read and write large amounts of data at the same time. Two solutions you should try before any others are: - Archiving any tracks you dont need to hear during recording (see below)
- Mixing tracks you need to hear during recording down to one stereo track tocreate a monitoring track (see below)
Note: Muting a track does not improve audio performance because your computer stillhas to process that track during playback.To archive tracks: - In the Tracks window, click the name of an audio track you want to archive. Command-click the names of any other audio tracks you want to archive.
- From the Edit menu, choose Archive Tracks > Archive. The track names becomegrayed-out and Metro ignores the tracks during playback.
To unarchive tracks: - Select the tracks you want to unarchive.
- From the Edit menu, choose Archive Tracks > Unarchive.
To mix a monitoring track: - Command-click the names of the audio tracks you need to hear during recording.
- From the File menu, choose Mix Audio Tracks > To Track.
Metro mixes a new track from the tracks you selected and adds the extensionMix.AIF.Now you can archive all audio tracks except the monitoring track. Audio Playback Troubleshooting Guide Possible Cause Remedy Too many audio tracks Mix a monitor track and archive all other audio tracks Too many clocks per quarter note Reduce clocks per quarter note setting (Setup > MIDI Setup) Too many tracks on a disk Export some audio tracks to a different disk, if possible (not just to a newdisk partition) Buffer size too big or too small Increase or decrease number in For Playback Allocate field (File > Preferences > Buffers) Too many audio regions in a track. Metro creates a new audio region when youuse an audio edit command or effect from the Edit menu. View audio regions by turning on Show Audio Regions in the Switches menu(Metro dislays audio regions inside a red rectangle in the Graphic Editor). If atrack has numerous audio regions, select it and use the File > Export Audio Trackcommand, and check Replace source track with exported audio. CD or DVD in driveIn some cases having a CD in the drive will slow down the entire OS. Eject the CD or DVD. Too much disk activityIn finder preferences, turn off all 'languages for searching for file contents'. Problems with recording stem from the same causes as playback, with theexception of buffer size. Increasing the number of buffers instead of the size cansometimes improve recording performance. In addition, there are several steps you can take to optimize your harddisk(s) for audio performance: Disk Optimization Guide Disk Problem Remedy Disk is fragmented, increasing seek time Run a utility to defragment your diisk Disk operation slowed down by unnecessary instructions In the Finder, choose View > View Options > and uncheck Calculate folder sizes Disk operation slowed down by unnecessary instructions When you format a disk for recording, you may have the option to choose theExtended setting that supports small file sizes. Don’t choose this option—choose the Standard setting. |