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Subject: AN1x+Cubase VST/PC = bad Midi timing?

From: "Lothar Mueller" <lm089@...>
Date: 2003-04-17

Hi,
I'm new to this list and already have a question to raise. I
searched the archives but found nothing that comes close to
answering my question:

only recently I started to experiment with hooking up my equipment
to a PC sequencer. The main idea is that I need some external Midi
clock signal to trigger all of my synths plus an audible click for
my drummer.

Since I use sequencer patterns from my AN1x in various songs I
started with the Yamaha, but had to realise that the timing is far
from being steady and tight: if I use a very simple pattern (one
note every eigth) and set its tempo to "Midi" there are audible
jumps and delays, and if I start to play around with some
controllers (esp. the ribbon) this is getting even worse!

Since I first had used a rather antique Toshiba notebook running
under Win98, using Cubase VST 3.7 as a triggering sequencer I
thought that maybe I had severe CPU problems, although Cubase's
metronom was VERY tight. So last night I tried a slightly more
powerful PC (PII 450MHz, running Win2k; for testing purposes
triggering comes from Midi-Ox; no other apps are running). Result:
the same - jumps and delays.

My question:

is there a known problem within the AN1x's Midi timing when the
machine is being triggered externally? Would this probably be much
better using a hardware sequencer or drum box or whatever?

And while we're at it: what I really would be looking for is some
small stand-alone machine, something like a Midi metronome that can
deliver audible clicks plus a very tight Midi signal. Set a Midi
clock speed in BPM, connect it to a headphone amplifier plus a Midi
patchbay, and of it goes. Are there any machines like this around?

Feel free to answer to the group or my mail address.

Thanks for any help!

- Lothar -