SoI've been using Reaper forever with various versions and up until today, I've had no problems. Now I load a project I was working on yesterday and when I try to select the POD HD500 driver in the dropdown it says "No ASIO Drivers Found!" and shows no I/O selection options.
Anyone have any other ideas? I'm not really looking forward to reinstalling my whole OS and all my plugins to get Reaper to work. I can use Cubase LE, WaveLab, or Studio One Artist with the drivers no problem (including ASIO4ALL).
yep, every other function is working, I can open the driver dialogue and change settings from Control Panel, driver and device show up in other audio programs. It's even still working as the output device for Foobar2000 (freeware media player).
I redid my USB drivers for the computer, removed old from registry, but this seems unneeded as it works in every other audio program like Cubase LE, Wavelab, etc....reset Foobar2000 drivers to WDM when it started, and I've done two un/installs of ASIO4All in the last 24 hours....thanks, though!
Yep, Edit works fine, the problem is isolated to Reaper, and I did remove ASIO4All as soon as I saw it wasn't working....I'm not a fan of the driver, but its been useful when similar issues have come up without the time to properly repair things cause it ALWAYS seems to work, which it did in Cubase...
So Reaper support forums are giving me nothing, the problem still persists...I've rolled drivers back (like a year and half back!), went all the way back to Reaper 3.2.....still not working. And, everything still works just wonderful in every other program on my PC that can use ASIO drivers in any of the versions/configurations I've installed....WTF! Guess I'll spend some more money and buy the Pro version of Studio One...
This had no effect on anything....I've uninstalled/deleted from registry/reinstalled drivers, done the same with Reaper (tried different locations, portable install to HDD, portable install to thumb drive, installation on a different partition) and the problem persists, but again, only in Reaper. Got my Studio One License on Saturday and have been working on bouncing out all of Reaper projects and moving them over (reaper still works with Windows native drivers for some reason!?!?! just not any of my interfaces or ASIO4ALL) If you guys think of something else, please let me know, as I'm not fully ready to give up on Reaper just yet, but thanks for all of the suggestions so far.
I am using Reaper and an ASIO4All driver who's buffer size I have tried setting to 256 512 and 1024 all to no avail. I have all of this installed on my HP Omen laptop computer which I use for video games, and should have plenty of processing power.
This problem has been getting worse all day (I've been at it for almost 7 hours now). It started off as happening every once in a while and I'd restart reaper and it would go back to normal. Then it wouldn't stop unless I recorded on a new track (making a guitar 2 track for recording and then dragging it to guitar 1 once it was done recording). Finally it sounds like that about 50% of the time and I just have to wait a little while for it to stop. In addition to the crappy sound I linked to, all day it has been inserting little cracks and pops into what I record, maybe once every 45 seconds or so.
Maybe this is caused by ASIO4all? I don't really know. Have you tried using the Behringer software (driver) to set the buffer size (of course you will have to pick the Behringer asio driver in Reaper instead of ASIO4all)?
If this doesn't fix it, are you by any chance syncing to an external clock? I've had similar sounding glitches when I connected an audio interface to a digital mixer without setting the clock parameters first (master/slave).
I had this same issue and what would recommend and what worked for me is make sure the two boxes by the bottom are checked when setting up your driver in reaper! Especially the (Ignore asio reset messages, needed for some buggy drivers) box
Muy bien, para configurar correctamente las interfaces de audio en Reaper, es importante prestar atencin a algunos detalles clave. En primer lugar, al abrir el programa, debemos dirigirnos a la esquina superior derecha y hacer clic en Audio Device. Aqu es donde se configura la interfaz de audio.
Por defecto, si no se cuenta con una tarjeta de sonido, aparecern opciones como WaveOut o Direct Sound, pero estas opciones no son recomendables debido a su baja calidad. En lugar de trabajar sin interfaz de audio, se puede descargar una interfaz de audio digital desde la pgina
asio4all.org. Para instalarla, simplemente hay que aceptar los trminos y condiciones y seguir las instrucciones del instalador.
Una vez instalada, se puede cerrar y volver a abrir Reaper. Al volver al apartado de Audio Device, ya nos aparecer la opcin de audio, y aqu escogemos asio4all v2. Al seleccionarla, veremos toda la configuracin disponible que iremos ajustando poco a poco.
Lo primero que debemos hacer es ir a la seccin ASIO Configuration y seleccionar la tarjeta de sonido que tenemos. En mi caso, uso la Behringer x32, pero cada uno deber seleccionar la tarjeta de sonido que tenga en su ordenador. A continuacin, se deben elegir el primer y ltimo canal de entrada y salida de la tarjeta de sonido y luego hacer clic en OK.
Una vez realizados estos ajustes, ya podremos comenzar a trabajar con nuestra interfaz de audio sin problemas. Si no se cuenta con una interfaz de audio, se puede descargar la interfaz virtual en asio4all y trabajar con ella, pero siempre es recomendable contar con una interfaz o tarjeta de sonido adecuada. En resumen, la configuracin de las interfaces de audio en Reaper es un proceso clave para obtener un buen sonido y un flujo de trabajo ptimo en la produccin musical.
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