Logic pro x stops recording after 1 hour

Using logic pro x (10.4.1) on high sierra. It stops recording audio after 1 hour 1 minute. Just stops, no warning or error message. This happens both on a mac mini (3 ghz i7, 16 gb ram) and on my macbook air (2.2 ghz i7, 8 gb ram). Both machines have over 100gb free, so I'm not running into drive limits.


I've extended to end time to 3 hours, recording 4 channels at 24/192. Logic stops recording at exactly the same point on both computers (time scale says 2:01:37). I'm trying to use it for live recording, so I'll need more than an hour of continuous recording.


Any suggestions??


thanks,

rob

Mac mini (Late 2014), macOS High Sierra (10.13.3)

Posted on Mar 18, 2018 10:02 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Mar 18, 2018 12:07 PM

Thank you!! The solution was to switch to CAF. I was running into the AIFF file size limit. (btw -- I'm recording four channels at 24 bit, 192K sample rate.) I'm running a full test now, but it has passed the 1 hour mark.


Wow, a correct solution in just 30 minutes, on a Sunday morning no less. This is a fabulous forum!!


thanks again, Eriksimon, for pointing me in the right direction!

Similar questions

8 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Mar 18, 2018 12:07 PM in response to Eriksimon

Thank you!! The solution was to switch to CAF. I was running into the AIFF file size limit. (btw -- I'm recording four channels at 24 bit, 192K sample rate.) I'm running a full test now, but it has passed the 1 hour mark.


Wow, a correct solution in just 30 minutes, on a Sunday morning no less. This is a fabulous forum!!


thanks again, Eriksimon, for pointing me in the right direction!

Mar 18, 2018 1:50 PM in response to Rob Welles

You're welcome. 🙂


If you don't mind me asking, why are you recording at such a redundantly high resolution? Pro people I know will often work at 44.1 or 48, and only if the quality demands are more than high, they'll use 96 k (or 88.2) - but never 192k. Also, the clock may be inaccurate (for certain audiointerfaces) at those high resolutions to such an extent that 192k recordings can be of lower quality than 96, 88.2, 48 or 44.1 kHz, which does more than negate the use of it - plus the 2- or 4-fold bigger files, ahnd therefore a 2- or 4 fold higher strain on the CPU when mixing.

Mar 18, 2018 1:55 PM in response to Eriksimon

Thank you for asking!


I'm seeking to capture the highest quality possible. File size doesn't bother me; drive space is relatively inexpensive. Now if there are clocking issues at 192K, then, of course, I'd go with 96/88.2. You mentioned certain interfaces exhibit this issue. I'm using an Apogee Element interface. Do you know if this interface has a clocking inaccuracy?


thanks again!

Mar 18, 2018 2:37 PM in response to Rob Welles

Apogee interfaces are considered top end. I would not expect any of them to have this "issue".

I'm putting it in quotemarks because I am pretty sure of two things: in a blind test even consummate professionals can not tell the difference between recordings at 96 or 192 kHz, and even the difference between 48 and 192 will will evade 9 out of 10 trained listeners. This clock "issue" can only be detected by tools and perhaps by ear by very experienced audio engineers.

If I had your setup, I would probably go for 96 kHz (also because it is the HD audio standard, 24/96 kHz), and only downsample a (copy of the) session (to 48 kHz) if it overloads the CPU.

You could try mixing the same session at 96 kHz, and a duplicate at 48 kHz with downsampled copies of the audio. Make sure the mixes are identical, bounce both sessions so their identical, then A/B/X test them.

https://headfonics.com/2018/01/seven-keystones-accurate-audio-blind-testing/

Mar 18, 2018 3:40 PM in response to Rob Welles

I'm afraid that is beyond my expertise - you'd have to ask people like mastering engineer Holger Lagerfeldt on LPH or gearslutz.

Those clock anomalies are known as jitter. Again, I think Apogee will be more than fine in that respect.

But I did find this piece by Ian Shepherd, explaining why it might be counterproductive to go for a high samplefrequency with any interface:
http://productionadvice.co.uk/high-sample-rates-make-your-music-sound-worse/

This thread has been closed by the system or the community team. You may vote for any posts you find helpful, or search the Community for additional answers.

Logic pro x stops recording after 1 hour

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.