I would rather have compression turned off.....and strap 2 to 4 G5s together.......and not have my CPUs crap out, when composing.....
SvK
SvK
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HERB,
Processor: G5, 2 x 2.5 GHz,
Ram: 4 GB
OS 10.4.2
Data storage: Firewire 800
Host application: Logic 7.1.1
Soundcard: RME HDSP MADI with 648 MADI Interface
Latency at 512 Samples (12ms) / 2.5 GB Ram usage
Maximum Vienna Instrument instances: 24 (CPU 90%)
Maximum Samples loaded: 45000
Maximum polyphony: 300 stereo voices / (CPU 70%)
Herb I can load 24 instances of VI easy.....BUT I can't play any of it multitimbrally without massive cutting out and stalling.....I'm not making this up and I really do know what I am doing.
The loading up is not the issue.
Any chance of you guys running these tests with current OSX?
10.4.2 is ancient 10.4.6 please
And current Logic 7.2 (7.1.1 is old now)
maybe something happened since Logic went over to universal binary....
thanx Wink
SvK
@charl said:
I would just like to point out that in some cases it may be your drives that might be touching their limits and giving you audio quircks. Upon 'live' playing, the system clearly has less flexibility to organise resources than upon 'sequenced playback'...
Also maybe Logic is the cause of your 'real time" quircks.
In Logic, there is clearly a difference between real time playing and sequence playback !!!
It would be interesting if you tested the VI in an external host and play the notes on a midi instrument in Logic connected vie iacbus to the VI host.. If you got the same problem on 'live' playing it would indicate that it is not Logic.
Also, bare in mind that OSX has the ability to re-organize resources to better achieve a task that it may have only partially achieved at a previous trial. Evan Evans wrote some very interesting thoughts on this last year...
He told of how, at 3rd or fourth playback, some exs instruments were running fine while at first playback the audio was full of hiccups.
I'm not saying it's totally connected to your problem, but it's worth knowing about it...
One last side issue worth knowing about (I donno if it has been corrected since Logic 7.2) is that in some cases, when Logic has hit a CPU limit, and has given you the alert message... You may find that it will repetitively give you that same message at 'given' point in the arrange, even though you've changed the arrangement and playback should run fine.
Usually this happens at entry point of a sequence. Clearly this is a bug !!! Logic has no reason to give you the 'CPU maxed' message.
There is one simple way to bring back Logic to normal : Nudge 1 or a few sequences (with start point at problematic position) back & forth a bar.
You might run into this problem if you're having CPU issues, so I thought this might be a useful tip.
Just a few thoughts...
Charl
@hermitage59 said:
Freezing tracks helps, but if i'm writing a robust passage, then i will get meesage of of CPU overload, and as you rightly point out Charl, shifting the playback point a bar or two frees up the system again, the messages dissipate.
Alex.