I have recently upgraded my pro tools finally to 11.2.2 (previously I was running 10.3.9 HDX and OMNI with very few problems). I'm running 2009 MacPro 4,1 with Mountain Lion 10.8.5.
I have noticed some quite disturbing behaviour and its really effecting my workflow.
Normally when I need to do any kind of fast panning, I'll play back in half speed (SHIFT+SPACE) and write the pan. Since moving to version 11 I have noticed that whenever I play back at half speed any pan automation that has previously been written to the file, I get really awful distorted cracks and pops panning randomly across my front 3 speakers. If I play back automation written to a fixed position it doesn't seem to do it, but if I go from say one speaker to another it produces the worst loud distorted sounding clicks and blasts. It's as if something is broken about the way its reading the automation. I am a professional and so there isn't the chance that I have written sharp aggressive spikes into the automation, that was the first thing I checked. I worried that it might be the audio file or something to do with my routing as the session was quite complex with a 7.1 fold down to 5.1. So I set up a simple 5.0 session put one mono track up, printed some pink noise and fed it to a 5.0 bus and wrote a pan around the room in half time. Play back realtime everything smooth and fine, playback half speed and horrendous distorted clicks again.
So I wondered whether it might be that version of pro tools. I previously had 10 co installed so i cloned my drive, got rid of any potential conflicting PT10 stuff changed the Tools to 11.2.1 (my friend is running this fine with no probs) anyway same problem, so I upgraded it to the latest pro tools 11.3.1, again same problem. So now I'm wondering whether there is something wrong with my OMNI or card even?
I'm running mountain lion which is said to be supported for all versions tried.
Anyone any Ideas or heard of this behaviour before? I never saw this with version 10. But after buying the OMNI and HDX last year, it's a lot to spend on something you can no longer rely on and have to try to work around.
I have noticed some quite disturbing behaviour and its really effecting my workflow.
Normally when I need to do any kind of fast panning, I'll play back in half speed (SHIFT+SPACE) and write the pan. Since moving to version 11 I have noticed that whenever I play back at half speed any pan automation that has previously been written to the file, I get really awful distorted cracks and pops panning randomly across my front 3 speakers. If I play back automation written to a fixed position it doesn't seem to do it, but if I go from say one speaker to another it produces the worst loud distorted sounding clicks and blasts. It's as if something is broken about the way its reading the automation. I am a professional and so there isn't the chance that I have written sharp aggressive spikes into the automation, that was the first thing I checked. I worried that it might be the audio file or something to do with my routing as the session was quite complex with a 7.1 fold down to 5.1. So I set up a simple 5.0 session put one mono track up, printed some pink noise and fed it to a 5.0 bus and wrote a pan around the room in half time. Play back realtime everything smooth and fine, playback half speed and horrendous distorted clicks again.
So I wondered whether it might be that version of pro tools. I previously had 10 co installed so i cloned my drive, got rid of any potential conflicting PT10 stuff changed the Tools to 11.2.1 (my friend is running this fine with no probs) anyway same problem, so I upgraded it to the latest pro tools 11.3.1, again same problem. So now I'm wondering whether there is something wrong with my OMNI or card even?
I'm running mountain lion which is said to be supported for all versions tried.
Anyone any Ideas or heard of this behaviour before? I never saw this with version 10. But after buying the OMNI and HDX last year, it's a lot to spend on something you can no longer rely on and have to try to work around.
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire