cmac185 wrote:I had wondered about recording in the same window. Could try that.
I know one user for whom that does not prevent the crashes, but does make them less common.
cmac185 wrote:Restarting Audacity between recordings also seems to keep it from crashing as far as I can recall.
OK thanks I made a note of that in the bug report.
cmac185 wrote:Checking the bad file in parallel with the file recorded on the other machine all seemed fine until about 10 minutes into an hour long recording. Then the lost data/dropouts start to happen. Though I haven't gone through the whole recording I checked 6 different bad spots and 2 were very close to 12 seconds, 3 were very close to 6 seconds and one about 3 seconds.
Those are very long for conventional recording dropouts.
The Audacity AU data files written during recording will all be the same length except the last one(s). If the data files are only 3 seconds long and you are recording at default 32-bit float, this suggests you are recording at 88200 Hz or 96000 Hz. High sample rates are not going to help if you are at risk of recording glitches. So I would make sure you are recording at 44100 Hz.
If you are indeed recording at 41000 Hz 32-bit float then AU files except the last one(s) will be about six seconds long, so a dropout of 3 seconds won't be caused by a recovery error. As another test, if you select a dropout, open Effect > Amplify... and "Amplification (dB)" is not zero, it's a recording problem, not a recovery problem.
Gale