Line 6 driver panel & recording, Audio routing, The line 6 audio-midi devices dialog – Line 6 POD Farm UX1 User Manual

Page 47: Line 6 driver panel & recording •1, River, Anel, Ecording

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POD Farm 1.01 – Driver Panel & Recording

3•1

L

ine

6 d

river

P

aneL

& r

ecording

So, just how does all that huge amount of Tone get routed around between your Line 6 gear, computer

and recording software you ask? All this is performed by the audio driver - a software component

installed with POD Farm that allows the audio to be routed to the right place. This section provides

an overview of the different driver types and where you can tweak a few settings to work best with your

particular computer setup. For more instructions about setting up POD Farm and your Line 6 hardware

for recording with specific audio recording programs, please check out the additional documentation

found on the

POD Farm Online Help

page.

Windows

®

64 bit users... The installation of POD Farm also installs Windows

®

XP

®

and Vista

®

64

bit compatible audio drivers for your Line 6 hardware. The Windows

®

features described here in this

chapter are the same for 32 bit or 64 bit Window systems.

Audio Routing

POD Studio, TonePort and GuitarPort hardware - Input sources fed into the Line 6 hardware are

handled by the audio driver, which manages applying the POD Farm Tone processing to your signal,

feeding the processed audio out the Record Sends to your audio software, gathering playback audio

from your audio software and then routing the audio back to the Line 6 hardware’s outputs and to your

monitoring system. The audio driver also grabs the POD Farm processed signal before routing it to the

Record Sends and hands this off to ToneDirect™ Monitoring immediately, to provide a low latency

monitor signal, which is then routed to the Line 6 hardware and mixed with the rest of your audio and

fed to your monitoring system.

POD X3/PODxt hardware - Input sources fed into POD devices are fully processed right on the POD

hardware itself. The POD-processed audio is then handled by the audio driver, which manages feeding

the audio out to the USB Record Send(s) to your audio software, gathering playback audio from the

audio software, and then routing the mixed audio back to the POD’s outputs and to your monitoring

system. POD also grabs its processed signal before routing it to the Record Sends its internal USB

Monitoring system immediately, to provide a low latency monitor signal, and then mixes it with the

rest of your audio to your monitoring system.

The Line 6 Audio-MIDI Devices Dialog

Since your Line 6 device includes our high-performance audio driver, it can act as a USB sound card

for just about any audio software that might be installed on your Mac

®

or Windows

®

computer. This

dialog is the place where you can access the audio driver settings for your connected device to see and

configure things such as the current Sample Rate, Bit Depth, Buffer settings, etc. One thing to note here

is that this dialog offers controls specifically for your Line 6 hardware type. The POD Farm Standalone

software is independent of these settings, however, you’ll see information regarding your Record Sends

here which may change depending on whether POD Farm is currently running in Standalone mode or

not. For POD Studio, TonePort and GuitarPort devices, you can think of the POD Farm Standalone

software like a giant rack of gear – if it is not running and configured to use your POD Studio/TonePort/

GuitarPort hardware, your guitar signal will still be heard, but will be “naked”, without all those lovely

amp & effects sounds. For POD X3 & PODxt devices, since your Tone is always running on the POD

itself, you’ll hear whatever your POD’s Tone and audio routing settings are set to deliver. POD Farm

Standalone software does not run with POD X3 and PODxt connected hardware (however, you can

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