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Post by tasteliketape on Feb 10, 2021 23:10:05 GMT -6
amature question of the day. I was doing a latency test in pro tools with a click and this is what the wav form looks like . the top is original and bottom wav is running through hardware which is in bypassed (no compression). not sure if the pic shows but even the top has some jagged edge, but not as bad as the insert. any help would be much appreciated. this is through Motu convertors thundrbolt to Mac mini . Is this a clocking problem?
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Post by drbill on Feb 11, 2021 9:55:05 GMT -6
No compression does not necessarily mean it's not going thru some circuitry before it returns. I'd try running out your D/A straight back into your A/D and checking again. No gear in the path and see if it's still doing the same thing. If yes, then it's obviously your converters - and/or clocking. If no, then the piece of gear you are running thru is $#@!ing up your audio - which of course is the beauty of analog!!!! Good luck!
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Post by tasteliketape on Feb 11, 2021 11:03:51 GMT -6
Thanks drbill , I redid the test this morning and wave form looked normal no jagged edges . Same exact setup .
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Post by ragan on Feb 11, 2021 11:15:07 GMT -6
Looks like a Fourier series with not enough terms.
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Post by svart on Feb 11, 2021 11:15:32 GMT -6
amature question of the day. I was doing a latency test in pro tools with a click and this is what the wav form looks like . the top is original and bottom wav is running through hardware which is in bypassed (no compression). not sure if the pic shows but even the top has some jagged edge, but not as bad as the insert. View Attachmentany help would be much appreciated. this is through Motu convertors thundrbolt to Mac mini . Is this a clocking problem? That's called ringing. That's what analog does.
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