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Post by popmann on Nov 10, 2013 14:02:44 GMT -6
Anyone using 32bit plugs in Cubase 7 64bit? Jbridge? I've used them With C6 with the native bridging for AUDIO....and didn't run into any issues. Did they remove the Steinberg bridge in 7? BFD2 was a bitch--didn't work (well) even with JBridge. Thank goodness they updated it to 64bits. But, I can't imagine there's issues with audio plug ins....is there? It's still a 32bit float audio engine....
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Post by Deleted on Nov 10, 2013 15:26:02 GMT -6
Ethan, i live in Brooklyn, NYC :-D and I can hear my neighbors upstairs walking around and talking. HALP!!! HAAALLLLPPPP!!!!!
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 10, 2013 22:23:01 GMT -6
NYC is in da house ! Oh man matkat, I live on the ground floor of an Upper West Side building in the mail room area. Below me is the water pump and the laundry room, and in the alley outside my window is the garbage pickup. I could be doing a great take and if one of those things turns on, I'm done, I have to wait and start again. There's no real workaround for the floor vibration. I'd have to pay $700-1,000 more to get the same kind of apartment if I moved.
So, is there a consensus here? Regardless of differences between 32 bit and 64 mathematically being inaudible, in the real world, the plug-in improvements alone make the jump to 64 bits a good thing. My mixes sound better now, so I'd recommend 64 bits to everyone.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 11, 2013 11:26:58 GMT -6
MJB, i used to live above a chinese restaurant in Astoria, and from 11am -11pm every day of the week they'd have their kitchen vent fan running. it was old and probably never cleaned, so it wasn't balanced, and it shook the whole building. 70hz low rumble + the sound of the fan itself. Now I have to contend with steam radiators turning on throughout the day and neighbors walking around! I literally moved in last wednesday to a prewar building in midwood. best upgrade EVER. better than 32bit to 64 bit, from motu to symphony.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 11, 2013 11:39:18 GMT -6
Ethan, i live in Brooklyn, NYC :-D and I can hear my neighbors upstairs walking around and talking. HALP!!! HAAALLLLPPPP!!!!! Acoustic panels won't do anything to reduce sound from leaking in and out. They will improve the sound quality inside your room though. The only solutions are 1) construction to isolate the floor above, or 2) find another apartment. --Ethan
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Post by Martin John Butler on Nov 11, 2013 13:52:11 GMT -6
Ethan wrote, "or 2) find another apartment.",
Now, if you can help me with that Ethan, I'll admit I can't hear the difference between anything, ever.
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 11, 2013 14:59:40 GMT -6
Ethan, i live in Brooklyn, NYC :-D and I can hear my neighbors upstairs walking around and talking. HALP!!! HAAALLLLPPPP!!!!! Acoustic panels won't do anything to reduce sound from leaking in and out. They will improve the sound quality inside your room though. The only solutions are 1) construction to isolate the floor above, or 2) find another apartment. --Ethan Can you be more specific? I'd suggest to chuck that he should determine if the space between upper floor and his ceiling is insulated? if not, figure out a way to use some ultra touch style cotton insulation to softly fill that void. Then i would suggest green glue and 5/8" sheet rock(or maybe 2 layers) screwed to his existing ceiling to get the transmission down to a small scream. Mass+decoupling+sealing air gaps= success right? If you could offer a little more tangible help it would be appreciated i'm sure.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 12, 2013 13:16:45 GMT -6
^^^ Yes, but that's construction. My point was that there's no simple product you can apply to the ceiling, such as foam etc. --Ethan
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Post by jazznoise on Nov 12, 2013 14:02:04 GMT -6
Acoustic panels won't do anything to reduce sound from leaking in and out. They will improve the sound quality inside your room though. The only solutions are 1) construction to isolate the floor above, or 2) find another apartment. --Ethan Can you be more specific? I'd suggest to chuck that he should determine if the space between upper floor and his ceiling is insulated? if not, figure out a way to use some ultra touch style cotton insulation to softly fill that void. Then i would suggest green glue and 5/8" sheet rock(or maybe 2 layers) screwed to his existing ceiling to get the transmission down to a small scream. Mass+decoupling+sealing air gaps= success right? If you could offer a little more tangible help it would be appreciated i'm sure. I'm sure there's a landlord out there somewhere reading this and he's having a hernia right now.
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Post by tonycamphd on Nov 12, 2013 14:46:14 GMT -6
Can you be more specific? I'd suggest to chuck that he should determine if the space between upper floor and his ceiling is insulated? if not, figure out a way to use some ultra touch style cotton insulation to softly fill that void. Then i would suggest green glue and 5/8" sheet rock(or maybe 2 layers) screwed to his existing ceiling to get the transmission down to a small scream. Mass+decoupling+sealing air gaps= success right? If you could offer a little more tangible help it would be appreciated i'm sure. I'm sure there's a landlord out there somewhere reading this and he's having a hernia right now. ahh, but what he doesn't know doesn't hurt? not to mention, the isolation between floors makes for happy tenants 8)
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Post by Deleted on Nov 12, 2013 19:01:16 GMT -6
if the floor plan for my place is identical to every other "E" apartment in this building, then they're in a 1bdroom above me, but it sounds like 3 people live up there. and they also have a dog. they talk pretty loudly and the dog runs around all the time and needs its nails cut lol. the walls sound pretty thin to me, because when my neighbors walk near my walls and the floor squeaks, it sounds like they're walking in the room, which is creepy lol.
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