razza25 wrote:Hey All,
I'm new here and have never posted before. So please forgive if what I'm about to ask is already in another topic, however after searching the forum extensively and reading a bunch of similar issues and solutions I can't see anything that's 'exactly' the same problem that I am having.
This issue is:
As I attempt to boot the d8b it "freezes" with all of the LED's across the meter bridge stuck on. It doesn't load the "DOS Esque" startup sequence, literally as I flick on the switch to the d8b computer to power it on, the freeze is the first thing that happens.
Oddly enough, if I turn it on and off enough times it will eventually boot up fine and play audio relatively well, however if I send multiple channels of audio at once through the d8b the audio starts to glitch and it sounds similar to the sound of a clocking issue.
SETUP:
mac pro quad core intel (SLAVE)
M-Audio ProFire Lightbridge FireWire Lightpipe Interface (SLAVE)
apogee big ben (MASTER CLOCK)
Please let me know if you require more info.
Any help would be very much appreciated.
Best,
Ben
Sounds like it's time to :
a) open the desk
b) clean and reseat ALL power cables (
there's 4 of them)
c) reseat any/all MFX/UFX cards
And you might even consider nuking your startup file... then ultimately reboot. If this doesn't work, it'll tell you a lot about what else may or may not be happening.
Certainly, you could always boot the desk up isolated from all the other gear, just the CPU/Desk. Without being onsite to actually see things, I'd personally break this down to singular parts of the architecture and test each individually as necessary. As it's been said - "Eat the Elephant One Bite at a Time"...
The clocking '
chain' here sounds OK, assuming the D8B is slaved to the Big Ben master clock siggy accordingly - check the terminations, t-connectors and/or cables. I'm not an '
expert' here by any means in terms of practical application, but the D8B does like to boot 1st before anything attached; I'm sure others here will chime in and bring this part of the discussion up to speed more adequately and do this more justice than I can. For all I know, I may be completely off base here (
and ultimately I stand corrected therein)...
I personally don't think you've got a '
serious' problem per se, I think your D8B has a '
cold'. You've just gotta learn to live and work around the '
quirkiness' of this older Mackie hardware - they're somewhat like a vintage auto in a certain analogue. Just keep in mind, it's essentially a '
specialized' computer (
the cpu/power supply unit) and a mixing desk. It's all digital internally for the most part so there's not a lot of '
moving parts' as it were. The Sonido database linked to this forum above is also an excellent archived source of all things D8B -
http://www.sonido-7.com/d8b/index.html - there's a shit-ton of data there too. If you haven't as of yet, I'd personally recommend you look thru the info on that site...
Above all, just stay with it and be patient. Post back here with the ongoing progress, this forum community ROCKS and will help get this resolved for ya...
However as always, you knew it was coming so here it is :
[Standard Mgmt Disclaimer] - "
Your Actual Mileage May Vary..."
Peace