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2048 is usually a pretty big delay in latency. The other app may have been using that for playback or something. I usually try no larger than 1024, but try 512 and 256 first. 128 is awesome but puts a ton of strain on your cpu.
You can hear up to about 20 ms delay as ok but after that it's gets to be too much. each ms is about 1 foot distance. So playing drums you'd have a 3ms delay between hitting the snare and hearing it. For guitar you might have a 10 ms delay.
Perhaps your other software was doing direct monitoring where you were hearing the dry unaffected signal without delay. Now you're using fx perhaps and it has to run through the software first causing the plugins to add delay?
If you're using plugins, try turning them off and seeing what happens. If you need reverb on your vocals to hear them, you can use the latency to replace the 'pre-delay' in your reverb.
Set up two vocal channels to record on. Put reverb on one and set it to 100% wet. Turn off the predelay on the reverb. Mute the other channel-you'll use it for playback only.
Now enable direct monitoring on your soundcard if it has it. You'll get the dry signal from your soundcard and the reverb signal will be delayed by latency depending on your settings. The longer your latency, the more 'pre-delay' your reverb has. You can now use the reverb channel as if it were an aux channel to your dry signal. I used to do this with my old Delta 1010 and echo layla. It was harder in n-track since you couldn't record to two channels, but in reaper it's easy to record the same source to more than one input. As a result, you can just mute the reverb channel and use the other one when you want to hear playback.
You can hear up to about 20 ms delay as ok but after that it's gets to be too much. each ms is about 1 foot distance. So playing drums you'd have a 3ms delay between hitting the snare and hearing it. For guitar you might have a 10 ms delay.
Perhaps your other software was doing direct monitoring where you were hearing the dry unaffected signal without delay. Now you're using fx perhaps and it has to run through the software first causing the plugins to add delay?
If you're using plugins, try turning them off and seeing what happens. If you need reverb on your vocals to hear them, you can use the latency to replace the 'pre-delay' in your reverb.
Set up two vocal channels to record on. Put reverb on one and set it to 100% wet. Turn off the predelay on the reverb. Mute the other channel-you'll use it for playback only.
Now enable direct monitoring on your soundcard if it has it. You'll get the dry signal from your soundcard and the reverb signal will be delayed by latency depending on your settings. The longer your latency, the more 'pre-delay' your reverb has. You can now use the reverb channel as if it were an aux channel to your dry signal. I used to do this with my old Delta 1010 and echo layla. It was harder in n-track since you couldn't record to two channels, but in reaper it's easy to record the same source to more than one input. As a result, you can just mute the reverb channel and use the other one when you want to hear playback.
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