I searched the forum and read different topics regarding asio and realtek, but I'm 99% convinced it's windows 11. I've watched every YouTube video possible on how to delete/disable the the Realtek audio driver. While it can be deleted, it's only temporary. The second you restart or shut down the computer, the Realtek driver comes back. This wouldn't be an issue if it didn't freeze cakewalk and other vst's(ezdrummer) and I have to re start the computer constantly. Asio is the most steady driver, and I try to use that most often, especially if I'm using ezd in standalone mode. The most frustrating thing is, I can go on my old laptop with windows 10 and don't have any issues with the audio drivers. I contacted hp technical support and that was like talking to a brick wall. I guess I'm curious if anyone else had these issues with windows 11. The biggest thing for me is having the lowest latency possible. I run my roland drums into my laptop for ezdrummer, so I need the lowest latency possible, which is by using the asio driver.
If you're actually using the Realtek interface, do NOT use ASIO because that driver is super buggy. If you switch to WASAPI Exclusive, you can get sub 5ms latency easily, or 10ms using WASAPI Shared. You'll want to delete the Realtek ASIO driver entirely.
If you have another interface with proper ASIO drivers, leaving the Realtek enabled shouldn't interfere with it - I have various machines here with Win10 and 11 and the onboard sound is all enabled with no issues.
I have a behringer umc22, but I rarely use it. I have no need to use it for cake walk or ezdrummer as my e drums plug directly into my laptop via usb. Maybe it's just my laptop, but it is impossible to delete the Realtek audio driver. I've deleted it from the device Manger about 100 times now and it just comes back. Also, I did go into my bios settings and there is no option to turn off the mother board sound, but I really wouldn't wanna do that as then I woukd have no sound at all. Also, asio is the only driver that will give me low latency. Wasapi is around 10ms and that is unacceptable for drums, especially live. Asio is 1.5ms. That's a pretty significant difference
i just disable it in the device manager rather than delete it. i use this same tactic for a number of other bits as well since the OS finds and installs drivers for them regardless, however, disabling them means they're still in the system and so no further attempt is made by the OS to re/install them.
WASAPI is 10ms if it's in Shared mode, but if your interface allows it, try Exclusive mode. Shared has a hard lower limit of 10ms but Exclusive will let you go lower than that, at the expense of only CbB being able to use the driver when it has focus.
I can definitely vouch for using WASAPI Exclusive with a Realtek interface - I was actually getting lower latency and better performance out of that while I was on the road with my laptop than I was at home with my TASCAM 16x08 using ASIO. (Using a Scarlett 18i20 now and it's MUCH better)
Disabling it will temporarily use the high definition codec, but as soon as i turn the computer off or restart, it reverts back to realtek. I could go in and disable it everytime, but that would be super annoying. I should have the option of the Realtek driver or HD driver, but I don't and that is my issue. Also, wasapi exclusive will give me about 5ms latency at best at that's with alot of static. 10ms is the lowest I can get with wasapi with no interference.
Why are you not using Roland (Edirol) ASIO? from your first post I guess you use e-drums. BTW your audio equipment (umc, roland, build-in) is not capable to work with sub 5ms RTL, I mean 1.5ms you see somewhere is fake. Note that headphones with 3ms RTL are approximately the same as 0 latency with real drums (your head is about 1m away from drums, that is 3ms for the speed of sound).
My laptop has an 11th Gen I7 with 16gb solid state drive. It's very capable, but the asio driver seems to be best as far as latency goes. I have a roland td25 and the best I can get using that driver is 7ms.
Well, if I change the Record Latency Adjustment to Steinberg -- it just reverts back to realtek. I can find no place to disable realtek asio (asio specifically) -- I did go into registry and deleted it there -- all fine with Cakewalk, but the computer became very unstable.
In Record Latency Adjustement there is a possibility to set manual shift for all devices you have, on dialog display it select the first... but only the setting for currently active device is used. So select Steinberg and check manual shift is 0 (or set correctly, in case you have measured it). For Steinberg, ASIO reported value should be fine (or very close to real), so set to use it.
Note that even in case ASIO reports correct value, it is for device only. In case you connect something with own latency to the input (f.e. digital mixer), extra manual adjustment should be used. There are many detailed guides how to measure the value to set there, quick method is just loop record output, zoom to the sample level and notice the difference.
Thanks for the response. It's so odd. When I select Record Latency Adjustment I can change it, but it doesn't hold. So switching it to steinberg is meaningless -- which again I don't care if it doesn't make any difference.
What I've discovered though it that if I set it Cakewalk on ASIO and let it ride with realtek lurking -- it sometimes becomes unstable -- and when I am out of Cakewalk other things get weird -- for instance YouTube videos freeze and won't play. Again -- that's a so-what except it indicates an instability. Sometimes it Cakewalk just kind of freezes and circles and circles.
When I deleted realtek in the registry, Cakewalk looked and ran great. But the computer got a bit funky. For instance -- Windows Explorer kept shutting off requiring me to restart it. Again, there are worse problems in the world, but odd.
Edit: I continued looking around and found a thread from a couple years ago (back when I didn't have this problem) and the consensus was to edit the registry. I've done that before but I have to say it's a little concerning because my computer seemed to get unstable after that (perhaps a coincidence?)
About computer optimization for audio there are many threads and forums. Enabled Realtek by itself should not influence anything, at least not when unused (by Cakewalk and Windows). Getting most stable drivers under Window, which means RME device, is pricey. Steinberg should work fine when computer/system are ok.
This video has helped 1,000's of people. Let me know if you have further questions. It is not that hard to properly set up a audio system espesially if you are using a proper ASIO audio interface. On Board audio will work if you are only working ITB but otherwise you need ASIO or your tracks will not sync up. Using a drum module is one of the few situations where ANY latency can through you off so use the Drums Brain while tracking for Pete's sake and it won't matter. 99% of the audio interfaces used these days will be operating at around 10 ms of RTL at a SAFE buffer level. You want less then spend $800+
@John Vere In your video "Record Latency Adjustment" (7:30) note is not accurate. For some (historical?) reason, Cakewalk list not only currently used device there, but also other devices. Whenever dialog is open, it select "the first" in the list, which can be currently unused device.
Even more, Cakewalk can mess with these settings in case driver mode is changed and the sequence of devices in one mode differ from the sequence in other, it seems like Cakewalk remember/show manual offsets as a list, ignoring devices. So the shift set for one device appear as a shift for other after driver mode change. That is clearly a bug. Cakewalk IO settings (MIDI and Audio) are periodically messed since years, I guess there is some general deep problem there which is hard to fix.
I recently bought a Archer T4U v3 USB Adapter, and everytime i boot my computer the driver resets from the official TP-Link Driver to a generic Realtek Driver, which causes massive packet loss in my connection making it impossible to use. Is there a way to prevent windows 10 from switching the drivers everytime i boot? The only workaround i found was to repair the TP-Link driver through the app, but everytime i reboot the Realtek gets installed again.
Everytime i reboot the PC i get the usb disconnected and connected sound and the driver changes from the TP-Link to a Realtek. When i repair the driver with the TP-Link application, the driver changes to the correct one, and it works fine when i do that, but when i reboot the pc, the driver gets overwritten by the realtek one and i get massive packet losses with it.
I never installed any realtek driver, windows 10 installed it automatically when i inserted the usb adapter on the pc for the first time, and even if i try to uninstall this driver it gets installed again.
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