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I am having a similar problem with a slight twist: I have FC7 and Waves 9.0 installed on my MacPro running OS 10.7.5 (I haven't updated because it's been very stable for Logic Pro 9.1.8, my main work horse).Īfter launching FCP7, it will scan my plugs and get stuck on 2 waves AU plugins and 1 SoundToys AU plug, but lets me skip them and runs FCP7 for a little bit before crashing. *The first launch may take a few minutes, but on the bottom right of the Dock you should be able to see the infoHelper icon bouncing and possibly multiple black icons flashing as Final Cut tries to re-scan for Audio Units (make sure if you have an external authorization key for the plugins that it is plugged in) (Click GO from the Finder Menu Bar and hold OPTION to reveal the Library) Go To ~ Library > Preferences > move this file to the trash: .plist Go to Home > Applications > Waves > Waveshells> RUN “Waves AU Reg Utility 9.2” Quit Final Cut X, if open or not responding The issue persists, but it does not occur in a guest user profile.Īfter speaking with AppleCare and Waves, here is the solution: Iv also deleted all of the FCP caches and plist files. Iv tried the FCPX troubleshooting provided by apple, reinstalled FCPX, launched Logic X with no issues, manually re-validated each plugin in Logic. After manually skipping each plugin validation error, every time FCPX launches, it freezes with a large window listing my invalid waves plugins. Im having the exact same issue - it began today when I forgot to plug in my USB key with my WAVES licenses. Here I have some Blue Cat Audio AU plugins in FCPX: I will show you an example on how this works. So if you are having issues with an AU plugin in FCPX, because it's not compatible or still 32-bit, you can use this utility to hide the problematic plugin before you launch FCPX and enable the plugin again when you wish to use it in another application. When you re-enable a plugin it just moves it back in the Components folder so FCPX or any DAW can see it again. The utility looks very much like the AU plugin manager in LogicX and it works just like the (now obsolete) Event Manager X: it moves any temporarily unwanted AU plugins to a "Components (Disabled)" folder that it creates next to the regular Components folder in Library>Audio>Plugins where your AU plugins are stored. You can find this utility here:Īudio-unit-manager.en./mac/download
UNIVERSAL AUDIO PLUGIN DISABLED FREE
If you are having trouble with some older AU plugins that are not validated by FCPX or that crash FCPX but that you still use in your DAW there is a free utility called AudioUnit Manager with which you can easily disable/enable any AU plugin whenever you want.