Out of interest I've put together a list of which of the included plugins are 64-Bit as I couldn't find one anywhere else:īased on this it definitely makes sense to use the recommended 32-Bit Mixcraft if you're relying mainly on the included plugins. The 64-Bit Mixcraft was another story - nothing but problems, as you said probably due to the graphics card although bridging the 32-Bit plugins probably didn't help. No other graphics/audio glitches at all and with only 2.9ms latency. No space at all unfortunately - time for a new PC, although the 32-Bit Mixcraft is working fine apart from that one Waves plugin GUI. No way at all, huh? I bet even the cheapest under $20 nVidia would cure your woes and speed a lot of other things up, too. That's a drag that your system has no room for another video card. So I dig up an old nVidia card, I mean this thing was an antique, stuck it in there, the Windows 7 Experience told me that it was bogging my whole system down, but I run Mixcraft 64-bit and it hauls ASS! I can crank my Firepods' buffers all the way down as far as they will go and it handles it, with a click or a pop here or there, but no tearing sounds like before.
Multiband Sonic Enhancer Plugin For Mac OS & Windows. I thought, well, my system ain't really cutting edge for 2015, so I'll stick to 32-bit, but then this year my neighbor gave me a nice hand-me-down 3.4GHz i7 system, which I popped 8G of RAM into but used my same ATI Radeon card, who cares, you don't need a lot of GPU for audio work anyway, and WHOOPS, same crappy performance with 64-bit Mixcraft!! Earlier this week, Waves released their new DAW software for live.
If this is not an option, please follow these instructions: Install Waves v9.3.
If you wish to use Waves plugins V9.6 or higher, you must use a 64-bit operating system. We offer support for the most popular DAWs including. To run Waves plugins on Windows 32-bit (7, 8.1 or 10), you must use the Waves V9.3 offline installer, which only includes Waves products released until September 10, 2015. Same deal when Mixcraft 8 came out and they optimized the code even more. Integration is facilitated using Mackie Control or HUI protocol to interface with your DAWs functions.
The 32-bit version went like a bat out of hell, though. I am a beta tester and from the time Acoustica first came out with a 64-bit version of Mixcraft, which was 7.0, I could barely get it to behave on 2.4GHz Core 2 Quad system with 6G of RAM. Oh, dang, I was going to say "graphics card."