Are there any hidden settings to reduce that latency? My main target is to achieve a quality, low latency piano sound from live playing on my midi keyboard. So if I interfaced with a daw like reaper with a high quality sample (such as ivory, or vintage) I could achieve the same level of quality & latency with the USB as with the 22vsl? Using my actual hardware with software tweakings would be lovely but also suggestions about buying new hardware that would solve the problems (cheap, if possible :) ) is appreciated. Just take a look at the settings of the wrapper, there is a knob for it. Looking more at the BomeBox - it appears you can connect class-compliant MIDI interfaces to it, so there is a way to avoid USB and still use just one BomeBox and multiple MIDI 5-pin connections. I use usb connection on both and I would like to have suggestions and ideas to get rid of the latency when recording. - Listen to midi & RMI (rmid) files with your custom instruments packed inside SoundFont files. This speed, called latency, is how fast the medium sends your input signal in and out of your computer. Latency is purely a function of the soundcard and its drivers. The difference is in bandwidth as opposed to speed of transfer. Now you can easily get a wireless connection from your instrument to any Mac, Win PC, Chrome, UNIX, Android or iPhone/iPad device ... even if that device an older, slower version of Bluetooth, or even no Bluetooth at all. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. There are a lot of technical differences between a USB and Thunderbolt interface. This saved device battery. mikobuntu wrote:...Another thing I'm unsure of the actual USB Midi cable the OP is talking about, but I know from experience that those cheap MIDI 5 pin to USB connectors def have a latency issue no matter what the settings are on the software, but direct USB to USB midi should be fine I guess. I've tried using several external interfaces (Keystep, Beatstep, Quneo, & Virus) but I get the same delay with all of these. Here are some comparisons between USB and Thunderbolt latency between our (Focusrite) Clarett TBT and Scarlett/Clarett USB interfaces. You want to use ASIO drivers on the Scarlett and ignore the soundblaster. SteveArch wrote:I've recently moved from Mac to PC and I'm having problems with MIDI latency in Ableton.Everything I record in Ableton comes in 1/16th bar late, even if using the Ableton built in keyboard. With the question about backwards compatibility, combined with no real benefits to round-trip latency performance, the USB 2.0 protocol is still the most efficient technology for professional multichannel recording for the channel counts our USB devices provide. 4, For your information, when I tested latency, I had two ways how to accept MIDI signals - gameport on my PCI Soundblaster and ESI MIDIMATE II midi/usb 2.0 cable. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. But if you don't use a DAW for musical projects, this is not an issue. USB is easily fast enough to communicate without noticeable latency. Usb sends itâs data in ⦠When you use one of our MIDI interfaces together with a keyboard or one of our keyboard controllers to play a virtual instrument, the delay or latency you might experience depends on the audio interface or soundcard you use for playback. USB 2.0 devices work without any issue on USB 3.0 ports, however the same cannot be said for USB 3.0 devices on USB 2.0 ports. There are a lot of great answers here regarding the bandwidth and jitter differences between classic din5 MIDI and MIDI over USB direct to the instrument, so I won't belabor them. In USB 2.0 the polling interval was 0.125ms, so the best possible latency for the host to read some data from the device was 0.125ms. There is only one data path in usb, and the host controls that path, it has to poll the usb devices and ask for the data. I have no troublesome latency with my USB audio interface and that's running at least four-in, two-out at any time at 44.1KHz. ESI was slower by ~ 1.1ms . Some cost under $100. And even ASIO drivers not always help. I got a few details from Focusrite regarding their USB vs thunderbolt speeds. If you do use virtual instruments (i.e. MIDI Mania; USB Midi Latency? The question is - ⦠MIDI ports on most Firewire audio interfaces tend to be the slowest. Had a substantial lag but I clicked on whatever you call that little sound button and it was fine. USB is not the issue - there is no bottleneck. - As tested app worked in background or screen turned off to practice USB MIDI Piano. MIDI cable length does, however, affect the quality of the MIDI signal, and in that way can have a bottom line effect on the reliability of your MIDI system. your keyboard if it has sounds built in) and this will have a quicker response when you play your MIDI keyboard. It runs Linux inside to do all the routing and switching that you can assign via a web portal with the Bome acting as a WiFi hotspot, and connects to the computer via ethernet. Essentially, latency is a combination of three things: Your computerâs hardware specs, i.e. Technical Difference between the Thunderbolt vs USB Audio Interface. Thunderbolt 3 has no latency benefit over Thunderbolt 1/2, just like USB 3.0 has no improvement in latency over USB 2.0. Hi, I noticed that the Midi input latency of the MODX is quite high. Both can do the same thing, but the main difference is in the speed of delivery. USB vs MIDI latency w/ new TD-30 sound module 08-19-13, 01:10 PM Installed the latest USB driver from Roland's site on the Dell PC laptop I've been recording w/ ⦠I guess USB is not a great technology if you care about low latency. This not only gives you low latencies, but better sound quality also. When I trigger my MODX and my Nord Stage from the same external midi keyboard, the MODX needs 5-6ms longer until audio comes out (all envelope attacks set to 0). Low latency usb is still much higher latancy than sata is. If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. The current software state, i.e. The UA Apollo/Arrow series (via Thunderbolt) will yield almost identical round-trip latency. Okay. These reliability problems can manifest themselves in ways that may appear to be latency, but are not. Midi thru usb is just fine (I use it myself). There are many Audio/MIDI interfaces to choose from. Also, you can create a new Playback Configuration with another MIDI device (i.e. £299 vs £459 for the 2pre interface. Features: - Low latency support for USB MIDI input devices. It's a gas to run Helix Native with 1ms total round-trip latency. Your input/output (I/O) channels, i.e. The delay between the time that you strike a note on a MIDI keyboard and the time you hear the sound is referred to as latency. First up, I don't know much about USB, so apologies in advance if my question is wrong. The difference in terms of latency seems minimal to me between the two and there is a big difference in price here in the UK. (I should state that MIDI through gameport doesn't work on Windows Vista and newer) And like the previous guy said, it has to do with handshaking. Cheap studio monitors vs vintage speakers I am getting into the audio world and looking for a decent pair of speakers. Don't need PC to make midi to stream musics. So while Midi Out is not a problem, Midi In is really slow. Not sure if you have a direct way to connect the P105 to the NS3, but you might try that without the laptop in the middle and see if you experience the same latency issue. I'm currently getting 3.9 ms roundtrip in Logic at 48KHz and 32 samples and 2.8ms at 96KHz at 32 samples MIDI to USB Latency Learn More â The Universal Serial Bus (or USB) has made a significant impact on technology in recent years, creating a standardized format for communication between electronic devices all across the board. A note about USB-C audio interfaces: Though the units connect via USB-C port, all the models I've seen thus far are actually USB-2 (not USB-3.1 as you might expect). Usb is a far fatter pipe than midi was designed for. Hi, On Windows 7 there's a great latency while playing digital piano connect to a PC via MIDI to USB. Ploytec's Windows USB Audio driver and Mac OS X USB Audio HAL-plugin driver enable buffersizes down to 32 samples (0.73 ms) and create an ultra highspeed USB audio connection, bypassing the operating system's audio, its mixing and samplerate conversion.. If you have a sound card that supports ASIO then you want to use the ASIO drivers for that card. If I remember my classes correctly, MIDI ⦠I believe the hardware Helix has ~2ms round-trip latency. I'm guessing your latency has nothing to do with it being MIDI over USB, but rather the laptop interface, processing and MIDI-OX software. You just can't set it to milliseconds, but a percentage value. USB and MIDI latency/lag in FL Studio 12 Hello everyone, I have a long standing issue with PC computers when it comes to electronic music and I was hoping the PC/Mac experts out there could help me figure this out. Latency with virtual instruments and MIDI interface / keyboard. I have a reasonably new interface a universal audio Apollo twin USB. Apollo/Arrow will run UAD plugins at ~2ms round-trip latency (using their Unison technology). - Export midi + soundfont to ogg. btw, you CAN delay MIDI with FL studio. The problem with USB MIDI has always been the MIDI jitter ( inconstant latency). MIDI: USB vs Standard 5-pin DIN, and how to convert USB-MIDI to 5-pin DIN MIDI - Duration: ... Ableton Audio/MIDI Latency Recording Issues with External Synths - Duration: 10:53. MIDI and audio should be sent out at the same time, to get 250ms late Audio you must be using plugins that introduce a lot of latency. Also, if you are using a USB3 interface or a USB3 hard drive, and you insert the USB 2.0 cable into a shared USB bus, the speed of everything gets reduced to 2.0 speed. I have heard talk of studio monitors and decent quality speakers, but I am wondering how they compare to older speakers that are bigger and require a tuner. If not, use the MIDI input on a PCI-based audio interface if available, and then that of a USB-based audio interface. Standard mode provides low-latency MIDI communication between up to four total devices. MIDI Bluetooth USB dongle WIDI BUD zaps latency Great news for musicians with bluetooth-enabled MIDI keyboards, guitars, drum kits or other MIDI devices. Lowest possible round-trip latency is not the forte' of the Apollo/Arrow. Once users have had the unencumbered experience of Roland wireless MIDI, they'll never want to go back. The best USB audio interfaces (RME and MOTU) will allow round-trip latency ~4.3ms. I'm hoping for reduced latency in USB 3.0 devices, but I'm finding it hard to learn what the minimum latency is. its processing power, RAM, etc. Really low latency audio tracking even with plugins on the insert. That's pretty strange. whether youâre using USB 2.0 or Thunderbolt or MIDI input/output, etc. To get the lowest latency you need audio drivers that support ASIO (Audio Streaming Input Output). your hardware drivers, how many applications are currently running, etc. The higher the sample rate (44.1, 48, 96, 192k), the lower the latency. The WM-1 connects to MIDI hardware devices with standard 5-pin MIDI I/O, while the WM-1D connects to computers and iOS devices via USB. If you have a MIDI keyboard with its own USB connection to a PC, use that for the lowest MIDI input latency.