RC-IA wrote:DJ, when you are listening to your bounces, "where" are you on the oasys ? make sure you do not go and listen to them after playing a program or combis that contain TFX, because your bounce will go thru those TFX
I went straight from the Sequencer to Disk Mode and hit the play tab on the bounced song. So maybe it went through the effects of the sequencer?! but like I said this is how I've always done it and didn't have a problem....but whateva.
Thanks both of you. Yeah I know it was probably just some fluk or something.
Actually the more complex a system, the more chances it will have problems.
So its actually wrong to be comparing a D200 to the O. The D200 has a miniscule amount of code and peripheral hardware running compared to whats in the O.
The only problem I have with my O is that I can't play Solos on my Strat when I am at the helm of the O. The EMI/RFI filtering on the O is not able to keep out the pickup generated noise. My solution is to move away when I am adding guitar.
There is a mathematical way to calculate meantime between failure for those who might be interested. Korg might even have that figure in their R&D dept for the Oasys compared with say the M1,Triton, M3, Radias....etc series.
Other reasons can be power distributrion, cable running, connectors making interrmittent connections...etc.
Anyway, in my case its a studio environment. The O never moves so I voted No problems. Sorry to hear some other users are having problems.
Music is food for the soul.
iMac 24"-Logic9 Pro,Behringer X32,Roland VS2480CD,Korg Oasys88,Korg Radias, Yamaha Motif XS8, Roland Integra 7,Roland XP80,Roland VPro Session,Fender USA Strat, Gibson Les Paul USA Studio, Ovation Custom,Fender Jazzmaster Base,Roland GT6, Line6 PodXt Live. TC Helicon VoiceLive 2, Marshall JVM 410H 1960CABS. Fender Princeton Chorus.
I noticed that a couple of recent Nikon DSLR's just received firmware updates for problems they had, so they are not without problems especially when using newer technology. The Nikon D series presumably keep re-using and refining the same base set of code, and that maturity across multiple generations leads to the same kind of stability we saw in the Triton Extreme for example. Your D200 is probably running 2.01 firmware so is somewhat mature.
The Oasys is both complex and also using a lot of new technologies, and in early versions it wasn't quite the same experience as using my old Triton which crashed just once is many years of service. However Korg have tightened it up a great deal and I find crashes or glitches very rare. It does seem that the last few gremlins seem to be hanging out in the sequencer/audio recording section according to the reports we read here. As we've seen Brandon and Dan from Korg pursue these things pretty seriously, so the best thing to do is keep reporting those problems with as much detail as you can, so they can reproduce them and get them fixed. Death to the gremlins