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Hi all, i'm new to the forum. Having some problems recently and wondered if an expert could help me?
I am a dj and have been recording audio mixes through my line in on windows xp using a program called wavelab for years. Now recently when I do so the played back recording has probelms. When it records it is missing out very small snippets of the audio causing a skip like sound as if it cant keep up with the audio so it misses parts out.
I have uninstalled the sound card and reinstalled it but still the same problem.
Any help would be great,
Thanks

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anonymous Tue, 12/22/2009 - 12:21

Hi mate and thanks for the reply. I have used this same setup for years with no problems. The xp install has no internet (never has) no antivirus etc, it has been fine tuned, all background shit is turned off.
I use this op system for recording and production. I have a dual boot system with xp and win 7. The win 7 install is used fgor internet etc.
The xp install is isolated from the net, dosent take updates etc.
Strange how it worked for ages and now there seems to be some latency problem when recording.

djmukilteo Tue, 12/22/2009 - 12:38

It's probably a problem with your audio drivers after Win7...
Go to the Control Panel/System and click on hardware and then device manager....find your Sound card in the audio list and right click and remove it.....then power down the computer....complete power off not a restart. Wait a few seconds....
Power up the computer, make sure the computer finds new hardware and re-installs the audio drivers....check hardware manager to make sure you don't have any little yellow exclamation points next to anything....
Go into Control Panel/Sound & Audio Devices and make sure your sound card is listed as the default sound device for everything....
You could also try re-installing WaveLab....
Dual boot can kind of mess up your hardware when one OS needs one driver and the other OS needs a different one.....most drivers designed for Win7 should work for XP but it's hard to know unless you test them both....your hardware isn't going to change just because you change OS....

anonymous Tue, 12/22/2009 - 12:43

Interesting but I cant see how my win 7 can effect my win xp. When i'm in win xp, win 7 isn't loaded ie it may as well not be there. I have completely uninstalled the sound card and reinstalled it and it is the default device for recording. I will try what you have suggested anyhow as pc's do the strangest things!
Forgot to mention, wavelab isn't the problem as I have tried recording in other software with the same problem.

anonymous Tue, 12/22/2009 - 13:08

the only thing i can think of is I installed ableton, but since uninstalled to try and fix the probelm. hardware hasn't changed. I did upgrade from vista to win 7 on my other drive (dual boot) but its completely seperate. Its really doing my head in! I might just reinstall xp. It worked fine for years and now this!

djmukilteo Tue, 12/22/2009 - 13:27

If you want to use Dual Boot, (which I guarantee is the problem) I would make sure all of your drivers and software are updated to run under Win7 and hopefully XP will run without any issues.
It's not like they are completely separate computers...
They are "sharing" and have to run using the same hardware....There are hardware components that get loaded prior to Windows loading....most of them are loaded before you even get to the dual boot screen...

Dual boot isn't the best or smartest thing to do for creating an audio setup and then trying to create a normal day to day system...
I would pick one or the other....
I would assume your running Win7 32bit?

FWIW...dual boot is a really sketchy setup anyway...
Most people have no reason to use it...
Having set up systems with Dual Boot myself many times...some people think it's cool but I've always found it to be buggy and a complete waste of time!....and should be avoided....it's unstable..
I'm sure everything on your system would run just fine under Win7 with all the proper drivers and updates installed...
Having Internet and anti-virus apps running on your system if properly setup shouldn't affect a properly configured computer with enough RAM and CPU speed anyway.....
You can always turn the internet off, auto-updates off and anti-virus programs off before delving into your audio apps...it's no big deal!
And if your computer is fast enough and has plenty of RAM then you don't even have to worry about that...unless it's some critical recording session in which case you'd be crazy to have anything running in the background other than your recording software....but that's a given...the more critical it is the more precautions should be taken....

anonymous Tue, 12/22/2009 - 13:33

djmukilteo wrote: If you want to use Dual Boot, (which I guarantee is the problem) I would make sure all of your drivers and software are updated to run under Win7 and hopefully XP will run without any issues.
It's not like they are completely separate computers...
They are "sharing" and have to run using the same hardware....There are hardware components that get loaded prior to Windows loading....most of them are loaded before you even get to the dual boot screen...

Dual boot isn't the best or smartest thing to do for creating an audio setup and then trying to create a normal day to day system...
I would pick one or the other....
I would assume your running Win7 32bit?

FWIW...dual boot is a really sketchy setup anyway...
Most people have no reason to use it...
Having set up systems with Dual Boot myself many times...some people think it's cool but I've always found it to be buggy and a complete waste of time!....and should be avoided....it's unstable..
I'm sure everything on your system would run just fine under Win7 with all the proper drivers and updates installed...
Having Internet and anti-virus apps running on your system if properly setup shouldn't affect a properly configured computer with enough RAM and CPU speed anyway.....
You can always turn the internet off, auto-updates off and anti-virus programs off before delving into your audio apps...it's no big deal!
And if your computer is fast enough and has plenty of RAM then you don't even have to worry about that...unless it's some critical recording session in which case you'd be crazy to have anything running in the background other than your recording software....but that's a given...the more critical it is the more precautions should be taken....

I'm running a dual boot with win xp 32 bit and win 7 64 bit. I need xp to run most of the cracked software i use for producing as they will not work properly on new versions of windows. I like to use win 7 for all other stuff other than recording/producing.