![]() To do that cleanly, close all DAW software, temporarily disconnect the interface and uninstall newer driver from Windows Add/Remove menu and then try to install the older one. (it's officially supported up to Windows 8.1, but I believe, it should be possible to install it also to Windows 10). If that won't help, then you might also try older 2.x driver. ![]() Click the Update Driver button and follow the instructions. Locate the device and model that is having the issue and double-click on it to open the Properties dialog box. ![]() So open ASIO preferences from Behringer driver (from another ASIO application for example) and set buffer size from Auto (which is default for the last version AFAIK) to some power of two value (eg. In Windows XP, click Start -> Control Panel -> Performance and Maintenance -> System -> Hardware tab -> Device Manager button. Open folder %AppData%\Avid\Pro Tools (just paste that to Explorer address field), find files named "Your ASIO driver.pio" and "Last Used.pio", delete them and lanuch Pro Tools.Īdditionally, there are sometimes issues with non-standard ASIO buffer lengths. ![]() I don't know if it helps in your case, but sometimes it's advisable to trash I/O setup for particular interface/driver. Pro Tools is sometimes very picky about ASIO drivers, it's quite known for its buggy behavior with otherwise non problematic drivers.
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