

Carefully follow the directions below to download and install the driver. Installation instructions for the ASIO driver are found in the USBPre 2 User Guide, but are provided here as a convenience.

For uninstall instructions, see Uninstalling the ASIO Driver in the USBPre 2 User Guide. Note: If a previous version of the USBPre 2 ASIO driver is installed on the Windows-based computer, it should be uninstalled prior to installing a newer version. This driver supports Windows XP, Vista, 10, 8, and 7, both 32- and 64-bit versions.

The ASIO driver for the USBPre 2 allows for low-latency operation and sample rates up to 192 KHz on Windows computers. The software driver (available for download below) adds ASIO support in Windows OS for the USBPre 2. This driver (v1.2) improves stability and performance with Windows 32-bit and 64-bit computers. However if you expect anything of quality, look elsewhere, the amount of headaches just to get this thing functioning is not worth the savings and you will never produce quality recordinngs from this anyway.ASIO 32 and 64 bit USBPRE2_1.2.0 DownloadĪn updated ASIO ® driver for the USBPre 2 by Ploytec is now available for download. If you are JUST getting into recording and want to dabble, this may be a good cheap solution (hint: there are generic ones that use the same hardware for a lot less than behringer brand and they are all equally crappy so get the cheap one just called Guitar Link). The drivers are awful and it doesn’t perform very well, I used it shortly to get by and then ended up buying a Tascam 2×2 which blows this thing out of the water. FYI, this guide telling people to use the Behringer as input and your onboard sound as Output is simply bad advice to workaround this buggy piece of crap that Behringer sells.This device is intended to use asio in/out all in the 1 device, if you aren’t getting an output then it’s not setup right. If you get crackling, then your latency is too LOW, and you need to raise your buffer setting.
