![]() This is the only solution lol) to remove the crackling. I'm sure you've read the horror stories but I can tell you after successfully making this Interface work on Windows I have spent easily 20 hours configuring a 3rd party tool (ASIO Link Pro, software that is no longer being developed or updated. Just return your Apollo the Windows support is abysmal and you will regret the time, money, and effort you put into getting it to work on Windows 10 or 11. I went though this same process recently, and I can tell you that it is not worth it AT ALL. To add to the other questions in this post, you will need a thunderbolt 3 or 4 enabled cable to connect your device to the thunderbolt port (These are not included with the Apollo or your extension card, I would recommend buying one that is 4+ feet Type-C is not Thunderbolt). Make sure you purchase a Thunderbolt Extension card that is compatible with your motherboard, as there are a few different board manufacturers and they all have their own unique thunderbolt headers You will need the ASUS extension card for your board. It has a Thunderbolt Header, you will need to buy a Thunderbolt Extension card and install that for your computer to recognize the Apollo twin. I am not sure if you've found an answer yet, but your board does not have a Thunderbolt port. Last Device Instance Id: USB\VID_05C6&PID_F000\d6bbce11Ĭlass Guid: When checking "Sound, video." in Device Manager, I see that "Universal Audio Thunderbolt WDM" is installed (10.36.44.71 ), and when checking the Driver Details from Properties -> Drivers, I see 3 Windows drivers and 1 Universal Audio driver:Ĭ:\WINDOWS\system32\DRIVERS\UAD2WdmAudio.sysĬ:\WINDOWS\system32\DRIVERS\UAD2System.sysĬ:\WINDOWS\system32\wdfcoinstaller01009.dllĪlso, this was in the driver log from the Apollo Twin X properties:ĭevice USB\VID_2B5A&PID_0009\820F9814BA29A58BA3498514398F3C2A was not migrated due to partial or ambiguous match. Oddly, when I try to reinstall the driver and select "have a disk", it keeps saying that the driver is not 64-bit, but it is. Right-click on "Apollo Twin X" and select PropertiesĬlick on the Driver tab if not already open Can someone check what they have for a driver? ![]() Seems like the driver should be something from that. Is that correct? I don't know what driver should be used, but found some INF files in:Ĭ:\program files (x86)\universal audio\powered plugins\drivers\uad2\圆4\win10\UAD2Fw.cat I've updated the drivers and firmware for Thunderbolt as well.īesides all that, I had run out of space on the install of the UAD software, and after restarting and reinstalling, I'm seeing that Apollo Twin X shows up in Device Manager, but the driver is "Billboard Device" and dated. I built this PC with the intent to get an Apollo Thunderbolt, the motherboard is a Gigabyte Z270X Gaming 7 with Thunderbolt 3 onboard. I do have a USB-C cable that came with my OnePlus 8T+, which allows warpcharging at 65 watts, so I was thinking that it might be able to work as a Thunderbolt cable. Just got this today, unfortunately, the Thunderbolt cable isn't due to arrive for several days. ![]()
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