• SONAR
  • Bit Depth Grayed Out (p.2)
2014/03/14 10:40:49
Cactus Music
I find it interesting when an OP obviously has returned and read our replies but does not extend the courtesy of an answer,,, Notice cook and I have helpfull tags! ??
2014/03/14 12:15:48
mettelus
Because they are helpful  ASIO4ALL can become one's nemesis :(
 
I sometimes feel like I am in "Bug's Life".... "They come, they eat, they leave..."
2014/03/14 12:29:43
John
Everyone has done exceptionally in my view in this thread except the OP. I also advise ditching ASIO 4 All. I don't know why people buy great gear and then cripple it with that wrapper. Somewhere someone is extolling its virtues even though its not meant for decent gear. 
2014/03/14 15:25:27
msr
Thanks for everyone's comments.  I will start with ditching Asio4all and update my interface drivers with the current manufacturer drivers. 
 
msr
2014/03/14 15:36:04
thomasabarnes
Cactus Music
I find it interesting when an OP obviously has returned and read our replies but does not extend the courtesy of an answer,,, Notice cook and I have helpfull tags! ??




 
He finally returned and said something, but he didn't say if he tried changing the bit depth before uninstalling the ASIO4All driver, to see if that helped his situation. So, the next poor soul who comes with a similar problem will have to try a solution him/her self.
 
Also, note that it doesn't have to be the Op to mark a post helpful, anymore. Now, forum users can do it.
 
EDIT:
P. S.
 
But, if a user marks your post as helpful, you should get an email that reveals which user marked your post as helpful.  
 
That is, if you don't change your user control panel settings to behave otherwise.
2014/03/14 16:22:11
slartabartfast
I agree it is very helpful to get a confirmation that advice worked, not to reward the helpful poster with gratitude, so much as to help the reader with a similar problem who has taken the trouble to locate this thread and is not sure which suggestion solved the problem.
 
On a similar note, although it helps to have the OP re-do the subject line of the original post with SOLVED!, it would be even more helpful if he edited the body of his original post to include the details of his solution. That way someone looking through the forum will find the solution at the top, and will not have to read through many unhelpful solutions comments jokes etc. to get there. What is not helpful if for a dozen posts like this to be appended to the thread so that finding the solution is even further buried in the middle of a long list of not so useful posts.
 
I appreciate the irony  involved in appending this post myself.
2014/03/14 17:24:57
thomasabarnes
LOL slartabartfast:

 
Well said, man. 
2014/03/15 12:54:17
Cactus Music
Ah ha! you are right this is what I found in my inbox. Mettelus is a very helpfull poster around here, that's for the tag. I didn't know we could do that. I will do the same as I find some answers are spot on. 
 
March 14, 14 2:30 AM

mettelus just marked your post as Helpful



2014/03/15 13:09:23
spacealf
In my case using ASIO drivers from my manufacturer there is not a choice. It is 24 bit. To change the driver bit depth in Sonar on mine on the General Tab of the Options -> Audio menu I have to choose Windows drivers - WDM/KS then I can do that, or perhaps MME drivers with the Advanced Tab of the Options -> Audio menu.
 
That just means that with ASIO drivers, I can Export the Audio out of Sonar and make it 16 bit then with or without Dither exporting the Audio into a Wave file (or perhaps *.mp3 file).
 

Back to you regularly scheduled music.
 
2014/03/15 14:05:05
John
spacealf
In my case using ASIO drivers from my manufacturer there is not a choice. It is 24 bit. To change the driver bit depth in Sonar on mine on the General Tab of the Options -> Audio menu I have to choose Windows drivers - WDM/KS then I can do that, or perhaps MME drivers with the Advanced Tab of the Options -> Audio menu.
 
That just means that with ASIO drivers, I can Export the Audio out of Sonar and make it 16 bit then with or without Dither exporting the Audio into a Wave file (or perhaps *.mp3 file).
 

Back to you regularly scheduled music.
 


Sonar supports all windows audio drivers. Steinberg created ASIO for the ability to have one driver to work with both Apple and Windows. Cubase only supports ASIO or MME for Windows. WDM is actually a better audio driver model if the developer writes it well enough. The problem is WDM is huge because it is not just for audio but all drivers that Windows needs. It takes a programmer that knows what they are doing to do a good job. What often happens is a specific manufacturer may just work more carefully on ASIO because if it works well he will have Apple and Windows covered.  WDM will be an afterthought. On the other hand some do equally well on both and it becomes in the case of Sonar which you prefer. Not which will work or what is supported. 
 
 
   
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