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Works pretty well for me too regardless of who is clock master. Though I did see some problems in the presence of a midi clock loop once... After I figured out how the clock was looping back in, i shut the door and the issue was resolved daniel On Mar 24, 2011, at 1:48 PM, Sylvain Poitras wrote: > Luis, > > What sort of problems are you having when trying sync mobius and > ableton? I have no issues with mobius as the master, other than > sometimes a loop that I hear as a single bar ends up as two bars in > ableton (or vice versa, can't remember which right now). BPM sync is > solid and seems to re-sync at the start of the loop. > > Sylvain > > > On Thu, Mar 24, 2011 at 4:36 PM, Louie Angulo > <louie.angulo@googlemail.com> wrote: >> Jeff i have a question, >> in playing around with both Abletons looper and Mobius as a plugin >> there is a BPM difference when i try to use Mobius as a master with >> Ableton which is unfortunately unusable if trying to sync grooves to >> it. >> Mobius seems to be much better as a slave though,but Abletons looper >> is very acurate as a master.Is this something that will work in future >> versions just as well when being used as a plugin perhaps? >> cheers >> Luis >> >> >> >> >> >> >> On Wed, Mar 23, 2011 at 4:12 AM, Jeff Larson ><jeff.larson@sailpoint.com> wrote: >>> >>>> I've been trying to set up the above so overdubs go where they should >>>> and stay there on subsequent passes. A couple of attempts have ended >>>> in frustration, i figured not helped by the fact that I'm using the >>>> built-in soundcard on an old desktop machine. >>> If you haven't already done so, read this section of the installation >guide: >>> http://www.circularlabs.com/doc/installation.htm#Tuning Latency >>> >>> Assuming you are using Windows, if you are using the built-in sound >card >>> you will be using an "MME" driver which has very high latency. It is >>> possible >>> for Mobius to compensate for this so that your overdubs will line up >but >>> you have to enter the right values into the latency fields in the >>> Audio Devices window. Sometimes the driver is able to tell us what >>> the latency is, other times it can't and we have to enter it manually. >>> This is explained in the manual. >>> If you use a pro audio interface it will come with ASIO drivers that >>> have very low latency. Often people don't even bother tuning latency >>> compensation since it is so slight that it is hard to hear even if it >>> is off by a few milliseconds. >>> As an alternative to buying a pro interface you could also try >>> ASIO4ALL which will give the built-in sound card an ASIO driver. I >have >>> had success with this, but if you're serious about sound quality you >>> should still consider an external interface. >>>> Reading the previous thread on mobius latency, according to Per it's >>>> not possible to achieve perfect sync i.e. it will always drift a bit. >>> I'm not sure what this was referring to, but you can certainly tune >>> latency compesnation for exact alignment of overdubs and once set it >>> won't drift unless you are also changing your physical location >>> relative to your monitor speakers. >>> Jeff >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> www.luis-angulo.com >> >> >