![]() ![]() I have therefore been trying to host instruments in the rewire slave version of Reaper instead of Bidule, rewired into Reaper as the main DAW. With Cubase I use Plogue Bidule which unfortunately doesn't work well Rewired into Reaper (glitches at loop end, switching of Plogue Bidules audio engine off and on and mysterious reloading of Kontakt patches in Bidule). I use Rewire to have another program host virtual instruments so that I can switch between songs in the host program without having to reload all the instruments all the time. I wonder if we're talking about the same thing? Under what circumstances would one Rewire a program into itself? I'm not quite sure what Rewiring Reaper into Reaper means. ![]() Doesn't look like something I could count on to deliver professional results. Usually, it would clear up if I stopped and restarted transport. ![]() Sometimes, I would get a staticky, bit-crushy sound from Reaper on playback. I tried changing how many processors PT was using, the percentage of CPU it took up, tried closing and relaunching both programs, restarted the computer, everything I could think of. When using a trim plug to reverse polarity (trim inserted on the Reaper Rewire return in PT, too, just to be safe), the right channel would usually completely null out, but the left would have at least a little phasey high end stuff. ![]() After that, sync was almost always close enough to phase, and never changed during playback. I discovered an option to uncheck in Reaper prefs - under Rewire, something about easing up on the CPU by adding a "block" of latency. It would sometimes jump between different amounts of latency during a single playback. Everything set up the way Shane recommends.Īt first, sync was variable - sometimes close enough to phase but mostly delayed by several ms. Reaper session is stored in PT session folder. Consolidated it to session start in the original PT session, dragged it into Reaper from the shared Audio Files folder. This is on a Windows XP machine, 2.83 GHz quad-core, 4 GB RAM, everything optimized for Pro Tools. Yes, I started testing Rewiring Reaper into Pro Tools yesterday. ![]()
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January 2023
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