
- #Using waves multirack with dante driver
- #Using waves multirack with dante software
- #Using waves multirack with dante trial
- #Using waves multirack with dante mac
If you want to use a daw for this application, Ableton live would be the go. So at this juncture, the whole idea goes to the back burner. I guess I understand Waves thought process with those prices but that doesn’t work for me. Too bad, I’m not about to pay triple for every Waves plugin and the DigiGrid stuff. At one point I turned off the DVS for a second to make a change and this put the whole rig into a hideous loop, good thing I had the PA turned down or I might have been replacing drivers, it was terrible! That really concerns me for live use, I wonder what else could trigger this?Īnyway, I had promised to write up an instruction document when I got this working but it doesn’t look like I’m going to be able to do this with my current rig. I’m glad you told me all this because I had come to the conclusion I should get the Waves card in my GLD but maybe what I really need is a computer with the Dante PCIE card.Īnother thing I observed while trying this out was it seemed like the whole setup with MultiRack was very fragile.
#Using waves multirack with dante trial
Am I being too picky there? At that point I had to get back to working something else and my trial ran out. I guess I could route all of the tracks through Studio One or ProTools but that seems like a lot of added failure points for a live rig. That setup would likely work OK for live but not monitors but I would have to figure out a way to delay all of the tracks to match the ones with plugging. There was some latency and it was just barely noticeable. Just for the heck of it I routed a track through PreSonus Studio One (V2) with the same plugins and had no problems with noise at all, very clean.

I suspect I could have tweaked some buffers or ? and cleaned that up but didn’t have time. I was playing around with the Waves MultiRack app and had all kinds of odd noise, not really pops and clicks but more like scratchy noise. Just FYI, I”m using the Mini b/c I want this whole thing to be very portable. I’m just hard wired between my GLD and the Mini with DVS so there is no external switching or routing in the picture here.
#Using waves multirack with dante mac
So if I read it right, besides buffer settings the key factor in your setup is the Dante/RedNet PCI card? I’m using a Mac Mini (fastest I could get about 6 moths ago) so I don’t have the option for a PCIE card unfortunately. For applications where low latency and reliability are critical you should really look at the M-Waves card together with a SoundGrid Server.
#Using waves multirack with dante software
This might be acceptable in a live application for FoH use, provided you delay compensate all correlated channels to avoid comb filtering (by routing them all into Multirack and using the software group delay features). – The processing latency of the plugins, shown here in samples.įinding the right balance requires some trial and error but even with the best computer you will still have several ms of latency (I couldn’t get below 5.3ms each way on my MBPro). On a Mac this is typically controlled by the host application (DAW request buffer size).
#Using waves multirack with dante driver
On a Windows PC this is usually dictated by the driver (again under DVS / ASIO).

– On a Windows PC, the ASIO Latency set in the DVS panel / ASIO. – The Dante Latency set in the DVS panel (default is 10ms, min value 4ms depending on system performance) – more on this in the DVS User Guide.

The overall roundtrip latency will be dependant on a number of settings including:
