If you do not set up the output busses manually sometimes “stereo output” is the only routing option in Cubase Pro 9, whereas in Logic Pro X there are audio busses there automatically.
Setup for Analog Four in Cubase Pro 9 using an Instrument Rack -
Presetup:
1.Go to Devices>VST Connections and make 4 new stereo audio outputs labeled a1, a2, a3 & a4 (this ensures you have audio busses to route your instrument rack in to).
Individual outputs routing of Analog Four:
1.Click Rack down arrow on VST Instruments window (right-hand side) to open a Rack Instrument and select “Analog Four”.
2.Click down arrow next to “Analog Four” in the instrument rack, choose “activate outputs”, and click all the outputs you want to activate.
3.Go to each separate track from the rack instrument and change the output from “stereo” to “a1, a2, a3, a4” respectively.
4.Make 4 new audio tracks and set the inputs to “a1, a2, a3, a4” respectively.
Now you can record the 4 sounds as separate audio files on the audio tracks.
If you would set it up differently or you have other ideas, please share for everyone.
A note on eliminating the occasional bitcrush sound:
As a side note how do you all set your buffer settings between your DAW and inside the Overbridge plug in as to avoid the metallic bitcrush sound that can come in sometimes? I had this happen with a sound craft mixer onetime and found out the reason it was happening was do to the USB cable not sending the information fast enough, so if you upgrade the usb cable it actually eliminated the problem completely (on my soundcraft mixer USB interface). Using Elektron Overhub I have heard can help eliminate that problem for some people because it increases the quality of maximizes transfer speeds. Supposedly the Audioquest Cinammon usb also helps with this sort of problem, in some cases, not sure if it would on Elektron gear as I have not tried it. And lastly as mentioned above setting the buffer correctly will be a big help as well.
So what is everyone’s take on all this?