ASIO overload means basically that audio data cannot be delivered *in time* to the device, which can have several reasons.
whereas formerly in most cases the PCI-bus was the bottleneck it can be any bus between your drive having stored the sample data and the audio output - a few things to consider:
- you should not record to the same drive you are reading sample data from
- make sure your drive is able to deliver the requested amount of data
- make sure you don't have any other firewire device on the same FW-bus
- latest drivers, audio settings properly configured (eg. not 2 applications share ASIO)
though you might not like another technical hint: one stereo voice needs 176 kB/s, in certain cases (eg. crossfades) even more and you should not expect signifcantly more than 25 MB/s throughput from a single harddisk at average access for sample streaming. do not rely on marketing-speech like *up to 100 MB/s* or similar, such figures are meant as boosts from the cache.
christian
whereas formerly in most cases the PCI-bus was the bottleneck it can be any bus between your drive having stored the sample data and the audio output - a few things to consider:
- you should not record to the same drive you are reading sample data from
- make sure your drive is able to deliver the requested amount of data
- make sure you don't have any other firewire device on the same FW-bus
- latest drivers, audio settings properly configured (eg. not 2 applications share ASIO)
though you might not like another technical hint: one stereo voice needs 176 kB/s, in certain cases (eg. crossfades) even more and you should not expect signifcantly more than 25 MB/s throughput from a single harddisk at average access for sample streaming. do not rely on marketing-speech like *up to 100 MB/s* or similar, such figures are meant as boosts from the cache.
christian
and remember: only a CRAY can run an endless loop in just three seconds.