

- #Digi 002 core audio mixer mac os drivers
- #Digi 002 core audio mixer mac os software
- #Digi 002 core audio mixer mac os plus
I downloaded the newest DigiCore Audio Mamager 9.0 from the Avid Drivers page under "Pro Tools Firewire Device Drivers I have a Firewire 400 - 800 cable going out of the Digi 002 and into the MacBook Pro. My suggestion was strip away all the ug in a single source and find out what the problem is.by adding the chain back in little at a time.My Digi 002 (Console) is not being recognized by my brand spanking new MacBook Pro. Unless you have a preference set strangely or something, Logic should be handling any "latency" compensation stuff for you, and if you're monitoring your audio input sources through a mixer anyway (and not after they've made a round-trip through "software monitoring" in the computer) you shouldn't be having any "timing" issues such as you describe. Monitoring through "hardware" (your Mackie mixer) shouldn't have anything to do with "latency" - in fact it should avoid it, since you're monitoring the "live" signal instead of the delayed input signal that's been passed through the computer.Īssuming you have the routing in your Mackie set up correctly so that you're NOT monitoring the input sources after they've made a round-trip through the computer. With all due respect to some of the above responses, I think you may be getting led off track a bit. I'm guessing your issue will have something to do with one of these settings - putting an analog mixer in front of your audio interface may add a gain stage to your signal path, but it's not responsible for any "latency" issues, that would be impossible. Under Audio: General tab, what settings do you have for:
#Digi 002 core audio mixer mac os software
Software Monitoring: (checked or unchecked?) Larger Disk Buffer: (checked or unchecked?) Under the Audio -> Drivers tab, what settings do you have for:ĭrivers ("Core Audio" or something else? Enabled?) Go to (drop-down menu settings from the upper left of your screen) Logic -> Preferences -> Audio. Then, check to see what latency compensation, buffer, and recording delay settings you have chosen in Logic.
#Digi 002 core audio mixer mac os plus
If you're monitoring all your inputs plus the playback of already-recorded tracks coming out of Logic via your Mackie mixer, turn "software monitoring" OFF in Logic.

Monitoring through "hardware" (your Mackie mixer) shouldn't have anything to do with "latency" - in fact it should avoid it, since you're monitoring the "live" signal instead of the delayed input signal that's been passed through the computer.Īssuming you have the routing in your Mackie set up correctly so that you're NOT monitoring the input sources after they've made a round-trip through the computer, that is.

Analog mic preamp -> analog mixer -> analog input on your Digi isn't adding any more latency, for all intents and purposes, than plugging a mic straight into your interface, unless you're talking to a nuclear physicist about the speed of electrons.
