Thanks to all that replied and all those who gave it a trip through the old noodle.
I had several builds of SIR in my VST folder (which was sloppy anyway), so I cleaned house and reinstalled V. 1010 and ba-da-bing working perfectly.
Thanks for the Convo Boy tip, I'll check it out.
This is a nice forum - I like it here!
PS - I picked up the ASIO4ALL tip here and the improvement is scary good in expected and unexpected ways, carry on!
T2 and the SIR Reverb plug issues.
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Bill @ Irie Lab Bill @ Irie Lab https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=82397
- KVRer
- 4 posts since 26 Sep, 2005 from Cambridge, MA
Aloha and Cheers,
Bill
Bill
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 238 posts since 24 Sep, 2005
Please humor me and explain how to accomplish this with a step by step. I want to get it right, and in truth, I have not played with routing in T2, other that routing tracks to indivudual outs on the RME Fireface.IIRs wrote:Could you also try bussing all the tracks that are currently routed to the main outs to another track instead, and insert SIR on the sub-group instead of the master section..
the sub-group should be routed to the main outs though of course
Thanks,
Philip
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- KVRAF
- 12977 posts since 29 Sep, 2003 from Ottawa, Canada
Pierre, I'll humour you:
1. Create a new track. Call it "Drums" or whatever your subgroup is going to be.
2. Put an instance of SIR (or whatever... a whole chain of FX... racks... whatever, as if it was just one track, which it is!)
3. For each track that you want to go to the "Drums" track, simply choose the new "Drums" track as the destination instead of your physical outputs.
3b. To do this, click on a 'sending' track, like "Snare". In the properties panel there is the "destination output for this track" which lists all your tracks plus your audio devices. For each track that will go to "Drums", simply select "Track 10 (Drums)" (or whatever the track is called) instead of an audio output.
4. Make sure the "Drums" track IS going to an audio output, though.
It's that simple.
You can go as many layers deep as you want. Say you have a bunch of FX that will apply to kick and snare only. You have a subgroup track called "kick and snare" and another one called "cymbals" and another one called "toms and misc" or whatever. Each has their own FX. But at the end of it all, you want them to go to SIR. You'd make a track called "all drums together" and route your other subgroups to THIS 'subgroup' (really, an umbrella group depending on how you visualize things because you're building from the bottom up).
If that's too much verbosity, here's the simpler explanation:
Click on a track. Look in the properties panel for "destination outputs" and you'll notice that TRACKS can be destination outputs, too. Take it from there.
1. Create a new track. Call it "Drums" or whatever your subgroup is going to be.
2. Put an instance of SIR (or whatever... a whole chain of FX... racks... whatever, as if it was just one track, which it is!)
3. For each track that you want to go to the "Drums" track, simply choose the new "Drums" track as the destination instead of your physical outputs.
3b. To do this, click on a 'sending' track, like "Snare". In the properties panel there is the "destination output for this track" which lists all your tracks plus your audio devices. For each track that will go to "Drums", simply select "Track 10 (Drums)" (or whatever the track is called) instead of an audio output.
4. Make sure the "Drums" track IS going to an audio output, though.
It's that simple.
You can go as many layers deep as you want. Say you have a bunch of FX that will apply to kick and snare only. You have a subgroup track called "kick and snare" and another one called "cymbals" and another one called "toms and misc" or whatever. Each has their own FX. But at the end of it all, you want them to go to SIR. You'd make a track called "all drums together" and route your other subgroups to THIS 'subgroup' (really, an umbrella group depending on how you visualize things because you're building from the bottom up).
If that's too much verbosity, here's the simpler explanation:
Click on a track. Look in the properties panel for "destination outputs" and you'll notice that TRACKS can be destination outputs, too. Take it from there.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 238 posts since 24 Sep, 2005
Many thanks for the great step by step. I'll give this approach a try ASAP, which may not be very soon.... other priorities lately..... :O(Lunch Money wrote:Pierre, I'll humour you:
If that's too much verbosity, here's the simpler explanation:
Click on a track. Look in the properties panel for "destination outputs" and you'll notice that TRACKS can be destination outputs, too. Take it from there.
I'll report back when I have something relevant to share.

