It's just and MP3 as a guide, I'm playing it on the desktop and recording my bass direct into the soundcard as I haven't got my Scarlett2i here. I haven't had problems doing this before.
Sorry I can't help but I have a query of my own.
I'm trying to put a bassline to a piece our guitarist has sent me using Reaper and once or twice on EVERY play through the playback pauses for a moment. His track is fine in any other player.
Can anyone suggest what might be going wrong? The only other foreground programs I'm running are Outlook and Firefox. (W10)
Add a zero the price and say it's a boutique maker and people will be falling over themselves for it...
(I think I tweeted my disgust for that particular one a few weeks ago...)
It does sound great, I haven't played a bouzouki since the early 90s and as I think it was tuned AGDB (or similar) like the top four strings of a guitar to make it easy to play. GDAD would be like a strumstick with a bass string 🙂
It is possible to design amps with Safe Operating ARea Protection - SOAR - that limit their output if they start to overheat, so they run louder and longer with better cooling. In practice I've only come across this on integrated amps - much easier to design with all the sensing components on the same chip.
It would surprise me if compact class-D amps don't do this. It can also allow an amp to output brief amounts of headline grabbing power taht it can't handle continuously.
Worth remembering that the PSU needs to keep up as well and if its a high-power SMPSU it will probably need forced cooling.
(On which point these days most computer PSUs are virtually silent so why aren't amps?)
The black bell shaped object is a jig that should help you with making a neat job of sanding the sides of the cavity.
It's not always obvious but the sanding drums fit over the rubber cylinder, loosen screw, slide on sanding drum and tighten the screw to expand the rubber and grip the drum. Easy to split to crease the drum if you don't know this.
Interesting, but it's clear Trace changed things lots. That diagram is marked SMX Power Board and is dated '97. I think my amp is older than that as it has a GP11 preamp.
If it's designed properly to be cooled passively, it should not matter.
I'm assuming it's the same 300W unit in my TE amp of similar date, which has an always-on (but actually rather quiet) fan.
<edit>
Yep, the SMX series have a 12V fan
Well I just listened to a YT documentary on Spem* Alium by Thomas Tallis, including a performance at the end. Left me wanting to experience it live.
At ~450 years old it isn't new music but is is to me...
*That's spem @Skinnyman