
The upgrade is free for registered customers.īefore the 64-bit upgrade, I would rate UAD Quad-2 cards and plugins a strong 4. UAD promised this upgrade at the turn of the 2012 year and they have delivered. I tried Cubase 64-bit last year with UAD plugins without success but that may have been my own fault for not working it out. The most annoying was screen flicker and sometimes it would cause the session to crash. I had performance problems with Sonar X1 and X2 64-bit when using UAD-2 cards and plug-ins when they were 32-bit. While workable, bridging was often problematic and could affect performance of the 64-bit DAW. Prior to the 64-bit release appropriately called “6.4” of the UAD plug-ins, DAW users had to bridge the 32-bit versions of popular UAD plug-ins with j Bridge or Bit-bridge. This is the news UAD users eagerly anticipated. This release makes UAD audio plug-ins compatible with 64-bit DAW software such as Cakewalk SONAR, Cubase, Presonus Studio One and Reaper. Some people with golden ears swear the electronics is better but the differences are very slight. It’s a software emulation of electronics. Universal Audio (UA), the manufacturer of professional audio recording hardware and software, has released 64-bit Windows 7 versions of their UAD Powered Plug-Ins v6.4 software.Īudio plug-ins use software to create the same effects as the old hardware boxes used by The Beatles, Elvis and even Frank Sinatra when they recorded. Universal Audio is shipping release 6.4 their Windows 7 64-Bit UAD plug-Ins, UAD-2 Satellite, and Apollo Audio interface
