yewneek
Member
Got the Scarlett 3rd Gen and mated with JBL 104 monitors, and I'm quite pleased with it the combination.
Been playing music while editing content I produce, and I noticed there's random playback glitches. Not cracks, or pops, or birdies, but glitches in playback. Sources can be mp3 or FLAC, but still the glitches persist.
Not sure if I have to run the Scarlett direct from a dedicated USB on the motherboard, or if it's OK sharing inputs on a monitor hub. The latter enables me to share the audio interface across two computers when they're using the screen, as it's USB-C and Displayport with a USB hub. Anyway, it works when each computer has use of th screen then they control the Scarlett Solo. Very neat.
There's a shared ground across both the computers, I tested the continuity wth a multimeter between exposed grounds, and USB shield and HDMI ground. This doesn't realy worry me as I know this is quite a common thing with interconnected systems, and the Neutral mains wire often being the shared ground on a SMPS for laptops too.
So, do I need a dedicated USB on the motherboard, even with enough bandwidth on a USB gen3 hub? Do I need specific ASIO drivers?
Image attached is a test FR loopback graph I generated in REW. Looks OK, but I'm still learning the software.
TIA
GB
Been playing music while editing content I produce, and I noticed there's random playback glitches. Not cracks, or pops, or birdies, but glitches in playback. Sources can be mp3 or FLAC, but still the glitches persist.
Not sure if I have to run the Scarlett direct from a dedicated USB on the motherboard, or if it's OK sharing inputs on a monitor hub. The latter enables me to share the audio interface across two computers when they're using the screen, as it's USB-C and Displayport with a USB hub. Anyway, it works when each computer has use of th screen then they control the Scarlett Solo. Very neat.
There's a shared ground across both the computers, I tested the continuity wth a multimeter between exposed grounds, and USB shield and HDMI ground. This doesn't realy worry me as I know this is quite a common thing with interconnected systems, and the Neutral mains wire often being the shared ground on a SMPS for laptops too.
So, do I need a dedicated USB on the motherboard, even with enough bandwidth on a USB gen3 hub? Do I need specific ASIO drivers?
Image attached is a test FR loopback graph I generated in REW. Looks OK, but I'm still learning the software.
TIA
GB