Hi All,Since I'm having Memory allocation problems in Sonar 5 (by the way,I did receive an email this morning from NI saying there will be a fix in 1 to 2 weeks for this problem)What I'm trying to do to save memory and not use to many K2 plug-ins is to use what sonar calls 'Groove clips' which are loops that you can adjust the tempo of. I had been doing this in K2 with time machine 2 and.My question is, How do I take an nki.
File and reconvert it to wave so I can import it into sonar?Thankyou,Tony. Click to expand.Personally, I never erase the 'source' WAV files for things which I have purchased unless it is very easy to re-load them from the original distribution CD/DVD or unless they are 'instruments' which I never plan to use.Perhaps you need to consider getting additional hard drive space since hard drives are so blooming affordable these days. I just checked 'PriceWatch.com' and 500 gig drives are currently what 250 gig drives were around 8 months ago. (I'm old enough to remember when I got my first 5 gig drive and wondered 'how will I ever fill this up?' That was before samples, of course.)KevinKauai.
![Aiff Aiff](/uploads/1/2/4/0/124067340/775323103.gif)
Mar 07, 2014 Convert the (wav) format to any korg format This video tutorial gift from Mr.Kamal Merhito my channel كيفية تحويل اي صيغة ويف الى صيغة تعمل على الكورك.
![Wav Wav](/uploads/1/2/4/0/124067340/169559364.jpg)
Click to expand.Like I said in my earlier post: I think you just have to load your monolith NKI's into Kontakt, then RE-save them, making sure this time NOT to save as monolith, and Kontakt should write out the wave files. You probably want to 'save as' using a different filename to avoid over-writing your original monolith NKI. (I think this should work - I can't try it right now as I'm at work). Another way, if you have an audio editor set up is to push the 'open in external audio editor' (or some such) button in the 'view loop' panel and it will open your audio editor with the wav data. From your external editor, you just 'save as'.Just to clarify: these methods will likely give you several.wav files for each NKI, depending on how many samples were in the NKI. Not sure there's an easy way to turn a multi-sample NKI into a single.wav file.