If that's the case, please see our Troubleshooting DPC Latency article. If you continue to experience clicks/pops/distorted audio after following the steps above, then you may be experiencing an issue relating to DPC Latency. Expand the various buses until you find your USB controllers. To view what bus your interface is connected to, open Device Manager (available from Control Panel), open the View menu and select “Devices by connection”. Connect the interface to its own USB bus.With any audio interface, you must trade performance/latency for stability. If you use a USB hub, bypass this and connect your Scarlett directly to a USB port on your computer.Some ports on your system may offer better performance than others. Connect your interface to other USB ports.Disconnect any other USB devices you might have connected to the system.Please note this will reduce audio performance issues but increase latency. Increase the buffer size - you can do this in the 'Focusrite Notifier' application on Windows (found in the Windows taskbar) or from within a DAW on Mac.Optimise your computer for audio by following the relevant link to the article for your operating system:.Ensure that you have downloaded and installed the latest drivers for your interface from our downloads section. IMPORTANT: The Scarlett Solo has a single USB 2.0 Type C port (on the rear panel): connect.With all of this said, please make sure to look for your specific Focusrite ASIO drivers after selecting ASIO as your technology, these should be listed next to ASIO4ALL.If you are experiencing connectivity or audio performance issues with your USB interface, you should follow these general troubleshooting steps to help overcome your issue: These drivers would also be optimized for your device, while ASIO4ALL is optimized for WDM devices in general. This means, using the correct drivers, it would be impossible for your internal mic and speakers to cause this feedback loop. ASIO4ALL access all "WDM" devices (Almost any audio device on your system, in short). The Focusrite drivers would only use the Focusrite device. These are similar to ASIO4ALL in the way that they will provide latency free audio, but they are different in a very specific way. Fixed an issue with USB 3.0 connections that was preventing Focusrite Control from detecting connected devices. Added support for 1st Gen Scarlett 6i6, 8i6, 18i6, 18i8 and 18i20. Important: Focusrite offers drivers for your device. Windows 10 (32 and 64-bit) Windows 8.1 (32 and 64-bit) Windows 7 (32 and 64-bit) Notes: Added support for iTrack Solo and Saffire 6 USB 2.0. Inside here, select the ASIO Technology and use the OUTPUT device to select ASIO4ALLOnce selected, use the PANEL button to see all available WDM devices in ASIO4ALLUse the WRENCH icon to show all "Sub-devices" (Think of your Focusrite as an example, this device as a whole is a device, but it's inputs and outputs are separate "Sub-devices".) On the left hand side of the panel you should now see "Power" buttons use these to disable ALL devices outside of just your Focusrite deviceOnce done, close the panel and the Audio/MIDI Set up to hear your AmpliTube playback properly Open AmpliTube 4 (With your speakers or output muted - to avoid the feedback loop)Go to the Settings -> Audio/MIDI Set Up. One thing that helped was changing channel 1 output to channel to and vice versa. Here are some instructions from IKM that got me going in the right direction. I had a whale of a time getting my solo 3rd gen to recognize AT4.
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