Now we need to replace the old sample with the declicked one. Deselect your declicked sample clip by double-clicking anywhere in the Edison window. The same concept of infinite slope applies for automation clips and plugin envelopes. The instantaneous step change confuses the processor very briefly, and you hear a crackle.
I programmed a Sytrus saw synth pattern to play a few notes along with automation clips that control the synth mixer track volume and the mix level of a low-pass filter in the signal processor chain. Looking at the clip and pattern arrangement in the Playlist, we can see the sharp vertical changes in clip levels at the end of each saw tooth.
You can hear the resulting bruxism-inducing pops below:. Just click the automation clip channel in the Channel rack, and then the wrench on the left side of the new window.
I did this for both automation clips. We can see there is now a slight slope at the beginning of each saw tooth and the blips have been reduced significantly.
Not perfect, but OK for a quick simple fix. The crackling and popping issue caused by buffer size is slightly different. A buffer in computing is like a bin where data collects while in transit between two places in a computer. Buffering is useful for handling large spikes in data processing demand from FL Studio. If the buffer size is too small, it empties too quickly under high CPU load and the sound card flips out. So to fix that, we increase the buffer size. First, navigate to Audio settings located under the Options tab at the top left of your FL Studio user interface.
You may want to go a little further just to be safe. It may take a couple rounds of trial and error to set the proper buffer size for your specific hardware setup. Worth adding to this is a word or two about latency.
Latency is the time it takes for all of the above to take place from FL Studio to your monitors. A larger buffer size will increase the latency. The rule of thumb is to keep your latency less than 12 ms.
Great blog, simple and efficient! Synaptic Sound. Table of Contents. Spread the Love. FL Studio Tutorials Troubleshooting. Author Nick Madaffari. Peter Reply. You can also try to narrow it down to a certain plugin. SolidShark New member. Its most likely the clipping sound you are getting due to CPU overdrive. That means your CPU is not meant to carry over the capacity amount. More Ram should help.
I just got me more Ram on my laptop and runs great. That shouldn't be all, if you notice that clipping sound can be build on any computer regardless of speed. So its not just a faster computer you need but also careful on leveling the sounds. Some sounds are more powerful than others.
Last edited: Feb 4, SolidShark said:. If it's on exported files well Clipping, as suggested, may be an issue Also, could the fact that my hard drive is almost completely full be contributing to the problem? You could try cleaning up the hard drive a bit by deleting or moving files that aren't essential elsewhere.
I don't know much about how that will affect anything. Also, is this only inside FL Studio? To be honest, the computer specs were much better than the last laptop I had. Clipping here seems to mean too much info for the CPU to process? In which case would it be more likely that I need more RAM or a new hard drive?
I was wrong to say the crackling appeared on the mp3. When I played the mp3 on my phone, there was no crackling - so the crackling heard on the mp3 was caused by the computer or interface sound card trying to play it. However, when I watched a DVD on the computer, also using the interface sound card, there was no issue! This is very weird. It's also worth mentioning that when I first bought the computer about 4 months ago, I was playing many-layered FL files with no crackling also through the interface.
It seems strange that I would have to virtually wipe my hard drive of information to get the files to work properly again, but could this be the case? Try disconnecting the interface and see if the issue remains. That should tell you if the issue is from the computer or the interface. I have to ask: Are you using a pirate copy of FLStudio? You may have viruses Viri? What about when you listen to audio files from your PC's audio card? Still have popping?
If not, then it might the drivers from the Focusright, and an update might help.
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