Tag: Audio Routing

  • Case Study: Fixing Podcast Sound with a RØDECaster Pro II

    Case Study: Fixing Podcast Sound with a RØDECaster Pro II

    The Challenge

    A new venture in West London had invested thousands into creating a visually stunning podcast studio, complete with comfortable sofas, professional lighting, a RØDECaster Pro II, and industry-standard Shure SM7B microphones. However, despite the premium gear, the recorded sound was described as “sub-par,” leaving guests unhappy and the owners bewildered. Fearing they might need to purchase even more expensive equipment to fix the problem, they brought me in to diagnose why their professional setup was yielding amateur results.

    The Amazing Audio Solution

    My forensic investigation began with the basics: tracing the physical signal path, checking cables, and verifying the input gain staging. The signals were clean, strong, and not clipping, and the multi-track recording into Adobe Audition was configured correctly. The root cause was hidden in the RØDECaster’s internal processing: the onboard effects were aggressively over-processed and inconsistently applied across different channels, creating a jarring, unnatural sonic caricature of the human voice.

    The solution was to strip the technology away, establish a clean foundation, and apply processing with surgical precision. Here is how we achieved that:

    • Neutralising the Main Processors: The studio’s initial settings had ‘Depth’ (a low-frequency harmonic exciter) and ‘Sparkle’ (a high-frequency exciter) pushed to near-maximum on some channels. I disabled these entirely across all channels, allowing the Shure SM7B to capture a natural, pure vocal signal.
    • Applying Subtle Compression: I dialed in a small amount of ‘Punch’—around 15%—uniformly across all channels. This acted as a gentle leveller, ensuring broadcast-ready consistency so no guest was dramatically louder or quieter than another, without crushing the dynamics.
    • Refining Advanced Settings: I bypassed heavy post-production tools like the De-Esser, Exciter, and Big Bottom, and left the EQ completely flat. I then engaged a steep High-Pass Filter (30-40Hz) to remove room rumble from air conditioning, set the compressor for gentle peak taming only, and added a conservative, fast-acting noise gate to reduce room noise without cutting off softly spoken words.
    • Creating Reusable Templates: To ensure the settings wouldn’t be lost, I saved this clean configuration as a new ‘Show’ on the RØDECaster and created a corresponding multi-track template in Adobe Audition, allowing the clients to launch future sessions with a single click.

    The Result

    Before leaving, I recorded a sample with one of the hosts and taught them how to apply a custom EQ preset in Adobe Audition tailored specifically to add mid-range presence to their voice. This empowered them to apply the same logic to their regular guests. A week later, the owners messaged me to say their first session was a resounding success. Everyone commented on the dramatically improved audio quality, and their studio finally sounded as professional as it looked.

    This article was originally published as a field case study on our sister site, Audio Support, and has been adapted for Amazing Audio.

    Is Your Podcast Audio Falling Flat?

    Great equipment is only half the battle. Don’t let aggressive over-processing ruin your recordings. Let our engineers dial in your RØDECaster, optimize your signal path, and empower you with a broadcast-ready template.

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  • Case Study: Fixing Logic Pro CPU Overload Errors When Streaming with OBS

    Case Study: Fixing Logic Pro CPU Overload Errors When Streaming with OBS

    The Challenge

    My client, a budding content creator, wanted to build a live reaction channel for Twitch and YouTube. He invested in tools like a Native Instruments Maschine controller to use as a live soundboard for sound effects and audio clips, running alongside OBS on his 2012 iMac. We had already successfully configured the complex audio and video routing to get his browser, webcam, and microphone feeds into OBS. However, running his Maschine sound library within Logic Pro alongside OBS proved too demanding. Whenever he started interacting with the stream—like switching videos or loading new browser tabs—his Mac would grind to a halt. Logic Pro flashed a “System Overload” error, leading to stuttering audio and a frozen stream.

    The Amazing Audio Solution

    The problem was a fundamental conflict of resources: his older iMac simply didn’t have the CPU headroom to run two resource-intensive applications simultaneously. A Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) like Logic Pro acts like a complete, broadcast-ready television studio, which was overkill just to host a single sampler. The background processes and audio engine were consuming CPU cycles desperately needed by OBS to encode the video.

    Instead of upgrading the hardware, we needed a simple, lightweight application to host the Native Instruments Maschine plugin. We swapped Logic Pro for a free micro-host utility called Hosting AU, dramatically reducing the background processing load. Here is how we implemented the stable workflow:

    • Install the Micro-Host: We downloaded and installed Hosting AU, a bare-bones utility that scans the Mac for all available Audio Unit plugins and acts solely to pass audio through them.
    • Load the Soundboard: Inside Hosting AU, we loaded a single instance of the Maschine 2 plugin and opened his previously created soundboard project.
    • Configure the Audio Output: In the preferences, we set the audio output to the Blackhole Virtual Audio Driver, utilizing the exact same routing we used before to ensure OBS could receive the audio.

    The Result

    The result was immediate and profound. The Mac’s CPU usage dropped significantly, allowing the client to run his OBS stream, play multiple videos, and trigger sounds from his Maschine controller with no errors, stutters, or system overloads. By choosing a single-purpose micro-host instead of a monolithic DAW, we solved what seemed to be a hardware limitation and saved the client from spending thousands on a new computer.

    This article was originally published as a field case study on our sister site, Audio Support, and has been adapted for Amazing Audio.

    Stop System Overloads During Your Stream

    Don’t let CPU crashes and audio dropouts ruin your streams. Let our remote engineers optimize your Mac, restructure your routing, and find the perfect lightweight tools for flawless broadcasting.

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