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Table Of Contents
Capture options
Keyboard shortcut: R
Record mode:
Here you can choose between stereo and mono, recording into the RAM via RAM wave projects, or
onto hard drive via wave projects.
Preload:
The recording is prepared, all buffers will be loaded. A requester will appear enabling you to instantly
start recording when the Record button is clicked. If disabled, there will be a short pause (depending on
the size of the Buffers) before recording actually begins.
Sample rate:
This option allows you to select the sample rate of the recording. Your audio card must support the
selected sample rate or recording will not work.
Resample to 44100 Hz:
With this button you can specify whether it should be recorded at 48 kHz or 32 kHz or even be
converted into 44.1 kHz while recording. This is useful when recording from DAT recorders via a digital
sound card if the material is to be used on CDs with 44.1 kHz.
Rec. dev:
Here you can select the sound card driver that should be used for recording. If there is no entry here, or
a wrong one, then your card is not installed on Windows correctly. Try to do this via System/Options >
Driver.
Info:
Here you can access a dialog that provides information on the sound card properties. If your sound card
supports 24-bit recording, you can activate this record mode via the info dialog.
Playback:
Playback while recording with record offset: Here simultaneous recording and playback can be activated
if supported by the sound card(s). If you record and play through multiple sound cards, small differences
may come about during playback of longer passages. This is as a result of sample rates of cards which
are not 100% synchronous. Ideally you should use the same card for recording as you do for playback.
Should your card have a delay between the start of recording and the start of playback, you can balance
it out in the Record Offset field.
To do so, play a sample with a noticeable impulse at the beginning and record it using a loop from the
sound card's output to the input. Then zoom into the VIP
to such a depth that you can precisely pinpoint the delay and gauge it.
File name/file path:
The name of the audio file that is to be created and the preset directory path are displayed in the bottom
record window. Both can be changed by clicking on the folder button.
Set CD track marker:
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