If you go any lower, they say it is diminishing returns. (Underruns are when you hear glitches, clicks, and pops, and is your computer telling you to either increase your ASIO Driver’s buffer length, or your computer may need upgrading soon!)įL Studio’s manual on audio settings tells us that the optimum setting is 440-880 samples (10-12ms). If you select less latency, this makes your computer work harder, but depending on the size of the project you have made, and the power of your computer, you may be able to run on a lower setting, because your computer can handle it without underruns. There is typically a slider, or radio button options, which allow you to have less latency or more latency. Once your ASIO Driver is selected within FL Studio’s F10 settings, you can actually further adjust the ASIO Driver’s settings. typically the audio interface’s drivers will perform better, but this is not always the case, depending on the quality of your audio interface.Īudio latency performance at the end of the day really comes down to two things:
You will have to see what ASIO driver works best for you. Now, if you’ve bought an audio interface, you may see your audio interface’s driver within this list as well.
I personally would recommend the FL Studio ASIO, as you can record your desktop audio into a software like OBS for extremely high quality screen capture recordings.