There is, however a bit of a “risky” way: you can try to catch the last available driver for your interface here (when I did the test download, Windows Defender didn’t complain, but please be careful, as there are quite a few “not so serious” (fake) driver support pages out there).Īt least this site names the probably last published driver package for the Fast Track USB (2013): Sorry for not being able to be more specific, or for speculating a bit, unless you give me a little more detailed information. Steinberg_Lower_Latency_ASIO Driver 406×516 76.4 KB (in my example, the interface localization is in German) It has a small config / routing page which is pretty much self explanatory: If (until now) you did use only the Plug & Play legacy driver, you could instead try Steinberg’s Generic Low Latency ASIO driver as a (temporary) replacement within Cubase, just to see if you can connect its inputs and outputs to Windows’ WDM drivers. ( you may already be well aware of all this)
Otherwise you won’t be able to see anything ASIO inside Cubase. (M-Audio - Support Knowledge Base - Drivers, Firmware, & Software Updates Search)Įven if Windows can usually handle many older interfaces (and even a missing ASIO driver from the original package), and although basic audio may still work well via the legacy WDM audio driver that comes with Windows, a specific ASIO driver by the interface’s manufacturer needs to be installed (mandatory 64-bit). Sad thing is that all these interfaces are a little bit older, and even within M-Audio’s legacy drivers section they don’t seem to offer any last published driver for download.
The first USB one, or the Pro, or the Ultimate? Which exact M-Audio Fast Track model are you using? Hi to the forum! While I suppose your Windows 10 installation is 64-bit (?):