@Rob Elliott said:
Hi there,
I love the perf patches - across the board - but with only two giga machines dedicated to my Pro Ed I find I am always for want of more articulations on my Orchestral Template (but run out of room on the 2 GB Ram machines). Recently I have dumped all the perf patches and have for all instrument groups their 'Basic' keyswitched one - which usually has stac/.3/.5/sus/sfz/pfp/trem/pizz (strgs). Seems I have more 'at my disposal' during the writing stage.
I then, when needed, go back and tweaked various lines / sections with perf patches (in the endless midi-tweak stage of the production.)
What are others ideas for the most workable 2 giga PC's template of VSL Pro (have Oboe 2 and a couple other Horizon products as well.)
When I am in the writing stage I really don't like loading and unloading tons of patches (kills the workflow for me [:(] ).
I would appreciate your ideas.
Rob
Rob - a quik fix to effectively double the number of machines you already own, assuming they are upto it and assuming you have GS3, is to install VSTack along-side GS3 and use GS3's rewire mode. I have done this on 3 of my machines so far, each has got 3gb ram onboard, 1gb used for GS3 and 1.5gb for VSTack (running a couple of instances of Kontakt2).
On one of the PCs I get slight crackling if I do anything too heavy with both samples simultaneously but that one's got slower drives and is an older motherboard/cpu. I can fix it by increasing the latency to 12ms. The other 2 are Athlon64s with Raptor drives, and can handle both samplers playing heavy orchestration at very low latency.
Only thing to watch is that you load up your GS3 tempalte first, then launch VSTack and load up your kontakts, otherwise GS3 can't use the full 1gb. GS3's audio outs appear in the VSTack mixer (a little louder than standalone but the latency stays lightening fast) and as long as you are carefull assigning your midi outs so that each sampler has it's own set everything runs smoothly. I load up both samplers templates each morning and never have to touch them.
Ian