Topic: RME RayDAT stability issues
I just got an RME RayDAT and have installed it in my audio rack. Its pretty good overall, however I am getting some issues with clicks/pops. One of the selling points of the RME PCIe cards was stability, and to be honest, at 64 samples buffer size, with the same number of instances of plugins, my old USB2 M-Audio Fast Track Ultra 8R performs about the same, in terms of clicks/pops during live playing of multiple tracks... Which doesnt seem right at all.
Im also noticing at lower latencies that when I move the mouse, open/close dialogues, or drag windows around, the clicks increase dramatically.
I'll start with my PC setup:
Windows 7 SP1 64 bit
Gigabyte GA-Z97X-UD5H-BK Motherboard
16GB RAM
2x Samsung EVO SSD
No GFX card (using onboard intel)
No wifi
My audio setup:
RME RayDAT PCIe card installed into PCIe x16 slot with latest drivers/firmware, clocked internal/master
Steinberg UR824 connected+clocked as slave via ADAT
Behringer ADA8200 connected+clocked as slave via ADAT
Reaper 5.2
I have done a bunch of optimisation on Windows so far, including but not limited to:
Turned on High Performance mode, made sure all settings were on maximum in the advanced settings
Disabled a bunch of unneeded services/startup items such as WLAN/WWAN related stuff, firewall etc
Set performance for Background services
Disabled network cards and other unneeded items in Device Manager
Turned off system sounds
Only allowed Windows access to one stereo pair of the RayDATs ADAT IO
Turned off CPU parking in the registry
Turn off intel Speed Step EIST in BIOS
Made sure I have up to date drivers for my motherboard, intel chipset, intel gfx etc
My DPC Latency isnt terrible, but its not great - it ranges from around 10ns to up to 500ns. LatencyMon does show some long page faults.
Currently Im underwhelmed to say the least - I bought an RME under the impression Id get high track/plugin counts with low latency and rock solid stability in comparison to my USB2 interface with generic USB drivers. So far it doesnt seem to be the case. Something has to be amiss surely.
Cheers