
94 Chapter 10 Plug-in Enhancements
If you are recording audio, another strategy would be to disable the Software
Monitoring checkbox in the Logic > Preferences > Audio > Drivers pane. This would
necessitate monitoring your recording via an external mixer. When Logic is not
providing software monitoring of incoming audio, it can correctly position audio
recordings—even when full delay compensation is active. Obviously, you can’t use
external monitoring when recording audio instruments.
Note: As Logic has no direct control over the audio outputs of external devices, plug-in
delay compensation can not work for MIDI tracks that trigger external sound modules.
If you activate full plug-in delay compensation and insert latency-inducing plug-ins,
external MIDI signals will be out of sync with the delayed audio streams. Logic allows
you to circumvent this issue with the External Instrument plug-in: Use it to route the
audio outputs of your external MIDI devices to the inputs of your audio hardware—and
monitor them through Logic. This enables you to compensate for the delays of any
audio streams coming from MIDI devices during playback.
Processing Audio Units When Running the Node Application
The Logic Node Application can’t process Audio Units plug-ins. It is, however, possible
to split tracks that use Audio Units into two halves. The first plug-in (and up to the last
Audio Units plug-in on the track) is processed locally (on the host computer), and
remaining plug-ins (Logic native) may be processed on a Node.
As an example: Use an Audio Units instrument plug-in on the host computer, and
process it with Logic plug-ins on a Node machine.
Adjusting Plug-in Parameters With the Mouse Wheel
You can use the mouse wheel to adjust Logic plug-in parameters in Logic Pro.
To adjust plug-in parameters with the mouse wheel:
1 Position the mouse cursor over the desired Logic plug-in parameter.
2 Click and move the mouse wheel.
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