Topic: Pops and CPU audio load spikes
I am new to VSTs, intending for Pianoteq to be my chief VST. I currently am using a Dell Latitude 5490 (MFG2018) i5 (7300U)/16GBRAM/256GBSSD with Windows 10 Pro. I play on a Casio GP400 piano, which should work the exact same as a GP300, 500, 510, or 310. I use a 6 foot USB printer style cable to take MIDI data from my piano to my computer, and a 3.5mm to stereo 1/4" from my computer to the line-in on the casio.
I have had several issues, which may or may not be solvable with this setup In anothe rpost I asked for advice about ground noise, which I have not eliminated but reduced. In this post, I am writing abou what might be a tougher issue to solve: My Laptop produces some pops.when used at reasonable settings for classical music. And it's got a lot of power, so I can't figure out why. I have done a lot of the optimizing which I read about in a document which is widely available on the web. My understanding is that Dell doesn't play nicely sometimes with VSTs. The one thing I didn;t really optimize is that I didn't go into the registry to keep all the CPUs on simultaneously, as I can't risk messing up this computer, which I need to have in reserve in case an office computer goes down.
When I look at the Performance index and that running graph of audio load, I see those red spike lines showing up, and MANY CPU usage spikes that just seem to defy common sense. If I do a glissando on the keys using the mouse,I get red spikes everywhere. Even when just playing a simple piece (in terms ofpolyphony) like Kinderszenen Op 15 no 1 (Schumann) I get occasional red spikes in the audio load graph. I will report some of my settings:
sample rate 48000, buffer 128 samples ( I tried it at 256 and it worked the same), 2.7 ms latency, asio4all v2. CPU frequency is 2611 MHz Performance index shows numbers of 98-116 (playing kinderszenen no1, a slow piece). I have CPU overload detection checked (should I turn it off?) When I look at the audio load panel as I replay a piece, there are occasional red spikes, I don't know what that means --- they don't seem to be associated with pops during playback, or high polyphony for that matter. When I click on "Show this devices control panel" in the Devices menu, an ASIO4ALL box popsup, in which Realtek Audio islisted under WDM device list, and there is a box (unchecked) which says Allow Pull Mode (Wave RT), a buffer offset control (defaulted to 0ms but adjustable to 20 ms). There are also sliders for "Latency compensation" in and out which range from 0 to 1024 samples (preset to zero). I don't know whatany of these adjustments on Realtek Audio do, if anything.
I ran Latency Mon. It says the system has trouble handling rea-time audio. One or more DPC routines that belong to a driver running in your system appear to be executing for too long. One problem may be related to power management, disable CPU throttling settings in COntrol Panel and BIOS setup. Highest measuered interrupt to process latency is 1173.50 us. Avg measured interrupt to process latency is 4.944540us. Highest measured interrupt to DPC latency is 1089.50us, average is 1.610236.
I can post the entire Latency Mon report here if that is helpful. I am not sure what to do next. I can't imagine that I need a BETTER laptop, but do I need a different one?
EDIT: what's frustrating is that Pianoteq says (FAQ) that "you can use any modern laptop successfully". This laptop should be more than adequate based on specs.