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Sonarworks with waves nx
Sonarworks with waves nx









sonarworks with waves nx
  1. #Sonarworks with waves nx install#
  2. #Sonarworks with waves nx drivers#
  3. #Sonarworks with waves nx manual#
  4. #Sonarworks with waves nx software#
  5. #Sonarworks with waves nx trial#

The Mobius will be useful for when I'm not at the big rig. So I'll continue to use the Waves Nx plugin and the big rig the way I am now even after I get a Mobius headphone. The little amp, DAC, and Cipher processing in the Mobius can't replace what the big rig does in terms of sound quality and style. I like my big DACs and their style of sound. I like my big headphone amps and their style of sound. The Mobius isn't going to replace my use of the Waves Nx VST with my big headphone setup. It needs to be easy enough for normal people to use, not just tech nerds. Getting that sort of tech integrated into headphones in a way that is easy to configure and use will be key. Also will be good for surround sound with movies. 3D headphone audio like this will be very good for gaming and virtual reality.

#Sonarworks with waves nx software#

You have to be a bit of a tech nerd to do it and keep it all working through various updates and software changes. The Waves Nx windows app and the VST are a bit of a hassle to setup and configure.

#Sonarworks with waves nx manual#

And hopefully Audeze will have a manual online that will explain. I'm waiting till release before trying to find out that sort of info.

#Sonarworks with waves nx drivers#

I don't know yet if the Mobius is going to require special drivers when used with Windows 10 or any other setup and system needs. I hope it ends up being an easier setup and configuration on Windows than the Waves Nx app or the Waves Nx VST. It is going to be neat, and I'm very curious to try it. When it's released I'll dig in an learn more about the details and tech issues. Alternatives like the Smyth Realizer are in the $2K range.Ĭlick to expand.I've been watching the Mobius, but haven't been following its development closely.

sonarworks with waves nx

Waves Nx does a good job of doing surround sound on headphones and also is a good crossfeed for stereo on headphones. It costs less than some of my other audio toys I've experimented with. I'm enough of a headphone nut that $99 for the VST and $49 for the DDMF Metaplugin and $99 for the Waves Nx headtracker is reasonable. The VST will only work with professional audio programs that support VST plugins or with special consumer audio programs that support VST plugins (like JRiver). The Windows app version will work with all windows audio programs, like even Spotify and Netflix and such.

sonarworks with waves nx

#Sonarworks with waves nx install#

The Windows app version does install as a virtual audio device and is a whole different thing than the VST version. I haven't used the Windows app version other than trying the demo about a year ago when it was first released. There is a VST version ($99) and the Windows app version ($9.99). There are two versions of Waves Nx for Windows.

#Sonarworks with waves nx trial#

(If that means using a DDMF wrapper, I can live with that I guess, although DDMF looks pretty troublesome too - it isn't recognised by Windows certification and demanded an exception in Windows firewall which I wasn't comfortable with.) So what I'm thinking is, if I knew which file within the WavesNX download was the VST plug-in, maybe I could extract that without installing the entire app, try again to load it into the DDMF wrapper and then see if I can successfully load it into JRiver.Īll a bit of a pain but what do you expect for $9.99? Yikes! I just checked out the price of DDMF - $34! Lucky there's a trial version available or I'd stop right there. What would work for me would be a simple VST plug-in that you can load into JRiver Media Center so that it only operates with JRiver (and even then, only when selected) and leaves all your other audio applications alone. It's also extremely persistent with remorseless pop-up messages, inserts itself into every audio application and not just one you've selected, and seems very difficult or impossible to disable. I've had so much trouble with this that I've rolled back my operating system to an earlier image (Macrium Reflect) to get the horrible thing off my PC! I wonder if WavesNX has changed since you installed it, Ham? It's not just a plugin any more but quite a comprehensive desktop app that inserts itself into the audio chain and, in my case (Windows 10), crashes all my audio drivers.











Sonarworks with waves nx