I'm not sure that Audacity is JACK-aware, so I don't know if you will be able to do this type of routing. I know that you can do simple multitrack recording with Audacity, but for real multitrack recording, you might want to check out Ardour, which is similar to ProTools. I am not aware of a way to record different tracks from different inputs simultaneously with Audacity. Jon M. On Wed, 26 Jan 2005 12:27:46 -0800, Mike Jewell <msjmsj49@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Hi LAU, > > This is my first posting here. Hope to do lots more... > > I have a M-Audio Delta 1010LT multitrack sound card in my computer and am > having lots of trouble with it. > > I'm running Linux 2.4 (Fedora Core 1) with the "Planet CCRMA" audio > environment on a Pentium 4 PC. > I use Audacity 1.2.3 for recording, etc. > > Everything worked fine with the built-in (stereo) sound on my motherboard. > I installed the 1010LT and rebooted. The computer found the card and seemed > to be happy with it. > > But many things seem to be wrong. > > I'm using envy24control to get the mixer, patchbay, sliders, etc. > > My main (first) question is how to get more than 2 channels recording at the > same time? > When I pick 4 channels in Audacity, it does indeed record 4 tracks but the > second two are copies of the first 2. > > The little drop-down menu in Audacity for selecting the source (line-in, > mic, etc) is empty and the input and output sliders seem to have no effect. > > Any helpful tips or pointers would sure be appreciated. I'm very new to > Linux so you might need to t-a-l-k r--e--a--l s--l--o--w--l--y > 8^) > > Thanks in advance, > Mike Jewell > >