Sep 25, 2016 - Maschine will sample from my interface and asio inputs but it won't play via the same asio. If you are unable to remove the cubase 'Generic Low Latency ASIO Driver' from. I removed the steinberg asio driver entries from.
![Generic Low Latency Asio Driver Cubase Steinberg Forum Generic Low Latency Asio Driver Cubase Steinberg Forum](http://daviddelbridge.com/_images/steinberg/wrong_driver.png)
The following options are available: Control Panel Opens the control panel for the audio hardware. Input Latency Shows the input latency of the audio driver. Output Latency Shows the output latency of the audio driver. Clock Source Allows you to select a clock source. Externally Clocked Activate this option, if you use an external clock source. Direct Monitoring Activate this option to monitor via your audio hardware and to control it from Cubase.
Ports Reset Allows you to reset all port names and visibilities. I/O The port input/output status. Port System Name The system name of the port. Show As Allows you to rename the port. This name is used in the Input Routing and Output Routing pop-up menus.
Visible Allows you to activate/deactivate audio ports. State The state of the audio port.
My Notebook comes with 'build-in' asio drivers called 'Generic Low Latency ASIO Driver'. Further there is ASIO DirectX FullDuplex Driver and ASIO Multimedia Driver. Sound card is: IDT High Definition Audio CODEC. Running Win7 x64 (HP ProBook 6550b).
All drivers are the most recent ones. Problem: 'Generic Low Latency ASIO Driver' sound output is much worse than using the other ones (there the sound is really great in both of them, but they have way to much latencies, so I cannot use them in cubase or any other music daw). So I'd like to use the (standard build-in) Generic Low Latency ASIO Driver. But the sound is much worse in contrast to the other drivers! It sounds a bit like a phaser or gramophone. Just to clarify: there are no glitches or stuttering in any case. Just the sound-'quality' is that messed up.
I'm getting really upset about this. Tried the recent version of the ASIO4All 2.10 driver, but the problem remains! The sound with asio4all is exactly as bad as with the buildin Asio Low Latency Driver. How on earth can I achieve low latency with good sound in Cubase? Has anyobne experienced things like this before, or might there be any fix for this? Well, it's just the standard driver that comes with my notebook, named HP ProBook 6550b.
I did not take control over the buildin audio driver installation, because win7 installs these drivers innately. The problem does not only occure in Cubase, but in any music tool/program/player where I set the driver to low latency (which obv does not make sense in others than cubase, but for testing I found out that it is not an application related problem). It is really strange. The soundcard seems to provide real asio, but the low latency sounds as bad as the 'pretending' asio4all.