> I enabled "Loopback" on both the PH3/4 and the AN1/2 outputs.
> Somehow this made it work. I'm not sure why -- but it works.
With Loopback you plug a virtual cable between an output and its corresponding input.
By this you can record the "wet" output signal AN1/2 OUT with effects on its corresponding input AN 1/2 IN.
> Ramses, two notes -- your tutorial, as far as I can tell, only talks about Windows setup. You mention in there a lot of
> "right click" functionality which doesn't work on a Mac (not even with command-click, option-click, shift-click and so on).
PCs have two and three button mouse since ages. Using google I found this in regards to Apple. I would assume that Apple user know their "beast" Please check, maybe I will add it as a side note.
"One way to right click on a Mac is to press the Ctrl (or Control) key when you tap the mouse button, or the trackpad. Don't confuse the Ctrl key with the Alt (or Option) key. The Ctrl key on a Mac is not the one next to the space bar, it's at the far end of the keyboard, on either the right or left side."
BTW, good that you mentioned it, when searching for "click" in the german text and the english translation I found an error most likely caused by the translation program which I am using for translating long texts, as it saves time and in some cases it translates better than me. However, where there is light, there is also darkness.
There was a case where I wanted that somebody clicks to a button which is on the right side of TM FX application and this has also been translated to a "right click" which was wrong. So thanks for your feedback.
> Also, you keep mentioning that everything is "simple" [...]
Yes because it is. The only problem is, that people don't take the time to have a look at the manual and don't take their time to learn how to use the software. They approach it with a completely wrong expectation and think it's enough to just wiggle the faders a little bit like on an analog hardware mixer.
In fact TM FX is optimized for the purpose of being a "monitor mixer" on the PC. Not only do you have 2, 4 or 8 submixes like on a hardware mixer, where you simply have some hardware limitations. With TotalMix FX you have as many submixes as you have hardware outputs. And as there are RME interfaces with 198 output channels (MADIface XT) ...
All you need to know first is that in submix mode "you click on an output and then you can see at a glance which input signals (top row) and which signals are coming from the PC/application (middle row)." You just have to think from the outputs when routing.
Once you understand this, routing in TM FX is simple and logical.
I have had quite different experiences with other manufacturers. After approx two years I still didn't understand their software mixer on PC, because the operation was not so logically consistent and the manual left a lot to be desired. It was always a struggle and search when you wanted to implement something special where you needed to route audio.
That's the reason why I can only state that TM FX is simple, because its my personal impression after seeing a lot of different software and also audio products.
The other side of the coin is that people naturally find very simple software easier to use. The problem is then usually that it can't do much either. In the long run, I think that's the greater evil.
> there is no reason to mention that anything is "simple" ... this is like joking or mocking the user
> who came to your tutorial, clearly looking for information they couldn't understand in the manual.
No this is not the intention and you are the first mentioning it. As I said in chapter "First steps": "The operation of TM FX is actually very simple, you only have to understand a few basic things of the operating concept at the beginning."
If you want I can review this and focus this only on selected fewer places if you think this makes everybody happier.
Up to now nobody complained and at the end of the day this is "cosmetic", most important is that you get the job done to get a good 1st time setup done and I think this everybody got managed by this so far.
> Another confusion came from your tutorial where you say TotalMix is a "monitor mixer"
I am using this term because I think that this is the best term to describe, why TM FX is a little bit different, when it comes to daily operation and routing compared to other products. I told you already, that TM FX is a highly optimized product.
In submix mode everything focuses on the HW outputs also referred to as the being the "submixes".
Remember .. every HW output is a "submix".
And how do you operate it in submix mode ?
You click to a HW output aka "submix" and then turn the fader to get exactly the submix that you want to hear on phones and speakers. Also the routing works output oriented.
Do you know a better name to describe the product and its own operation and to distinguish it clearly from other products, which are not so much optimized for this kind of application ? Even RME uses this term on the product page and on the forum.
> "Loopback" needs to be better explained. When you press "Loopback", what are you looping back to
> - the hardware input or the software playback?
Handbook ch 23.6 has the answer for you (if you search for "loopback" then you stumble across that already in the table of contents and later in the text):
23.6 Recording a Submix - Loopback
TotalMix includes an internal loopback function, from the Hardware Outputs to the recording software.
Instead of the signal at the hardware input, the signal at the hardware output is sent to the record software.
This way, submixes can be recorded without an external loopback cable.
Also the playback from a software can be recorded by another software.
The function is activated by the Loopback button in the Settings panel of the Hardware Outputs.
In loopback mode, the signal at the hardware input of the corresponding channel is no longer sent to the recording software, but still passed through to TotalMix.
Therefore TotalMix can be used to route this input signal to any hardware output.
Using the subgroup recording, the input can still be recorded on a different channel.
As each of the 6 stereo hardware outputs can be routed to the record software, and none of these hardware inputs get lost, TotalMix offers an overall flexibility and performance not rivalled by any other solution.
The risk of feedbacks, a basic problem of loopback methods, is low, because the feedback can not happen within the mixer, only when the audio software is switched into monitoring mode. [...]
> At any rate I'm glad to have arrived at least this far and to be able to record processed audio in a Zoom call setting.
> that's powerful.
Thats nice to hear. I wish you fun discovering a lot of nice functionality and don't remember, Rome also has not been built in a few days
> Thank you for your help so far.
You're welcome and thanks for your feedback.
BR Ramses - UFX III, 12Mic, XTC, ADI-2 Pro FS R BE, RayDAT, X10SRi-F, E5-1680v4, Win10Pro22H2, Cub14