Ahráyeph wrote:Dropping in late, but perhaps I can help shed some light, seeing as I'm using a Dell myself and used the big bro of the FA-66 - FA-101- up until I got my nifty Focusrites. I've never had network card related issues, though...
- Swapping PCI slots may help. My first thought was that the soundcard and the network card shared the same IRQ, but you pretty much ruled that one out, so that can't be it. I'm a bit worried about the audio controllers sharing IRQ's with the USB's. But swapping slots may just do the trick.
nope. tried it again & no difference...
Ahráyeph wrote:- Curiously, I'm also suggesting to uninstall either driver of the audio interfaces you're using. Here's why : I had LOADS of trouble for about a month getting my Focusrite interfaces and my M- Audio 8x8 MIDISport USB interface to work properly. I got countless blue screens, reboots, interrupted sound and all this nasty stuff you don't want to happen to you. When the Focusrite helpdesk came through (took a week, but at least they came through) they suggested a very simple solution : uninstall the FA-101's drivers. I did and the problem went away like it never existed! So Barry, you haven't mentioned this, but if you've got both the drivers for the Audophile and the FA-66 installed, ditch one of them.
aye. i ditched the audiophile drivers before installing the edirol
Ahráyeph wrote:- Something else, which is pretty standard advice for any DAW nut concerning sound cards : disable your on- board sound chipset in BIOS. It will eventually mess up your audio with its drivers, pretty much as described above.
nah, when i bought the pc a few years ago it didnt come with an onboard sound card (it actually had a cruddy "turtle beach" card in it)
Ahráyeph wrote:Last point : all recent (say, counting from five years back) pc's - and certainly Dell pc's - have a network port installed, which eliminates the need for a separate network card. You could try to use this port instead of that of your separate card. All network ports have a standard transfer rate of 10/100 Mbit so there wouldn't be much use for an extra network card anyway if it's only used for Internet and small network access.
it didnt come with an onboard network port either - that card that is in at the moment is the one it came with
Ahráyeph wrote:That's all I can think of right now...
thanks anyway.
i have 2 spare pci slots, so have tried all the cards in various positions with no difference
my pc is a dell dimension 4400. its a P4 / 1.6ghz with 1gb ram
i upgraded the original grafx card to a radeon 9600 a while back (socket is AGP)
there are a 5 pci slots (i seem to recall), in which i have: a usb2 card, a firewire card & the original 10/100 network card
when i first went broadband i used a usb dsl modem. i didnt use the network card, & had it disabled. the audiophile i was using at the time worked fine...
when i got a wireless broadband modem/router (so jo could use her laptop to surf at the same time) i started connecting my desktop to the wireless router via a network cable - thats when the trouble started with the soundcard.
that was when i bought the firewire card and the edirol in the hope that it would use different system resources etc and thus the sound would not not stutter anymore, but it hasnt helped at all
however, once thing i did notice in the edirol's manual was it says stuttering can often occur in sound devices when using network cards. the trouble shooting guide suggests disabling them.
which is a right load of f*cking use innit?
short of binning the lot and getting mac (;)) i'm not sure what the best option here is.
should i try a new network card? maybe a newer nic will have better drivers (even though my current one's are up to date)?
or maybe i should get a wireless card for the desktop, and disable the current card?
pah
i'll try running dxdiag
