Does anyone own one of these? It looks tempting for a budget minded guy like me, (about $800.00) but would just like to know if this piece is something you see often in the big mastering rooms.
Thanks!
~Bill
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It used to be very usefull but i'm not sure how usefull it is no
It used to be very usefull but i'm not sure how usefull it is now in a mastering enviornment. I receive masterlink discs all the time and I just pop them in my computer and off we go. I don't find the need for one as a playback unit. As a mixdown recorder, I think it's very usefull.
I don't know of too many mastering rooms that DON'T have (at lea
I don't know of too many mastering rooms that DON'T have (at least) one...
Agreed though, actually using it for mastering purposes is... Well... I'm not crazy about any of the DSP in that box...
However, I think the CD24 concept in general is the shite.
For $800, you should get two. Well, maybe one is fine. :?
Of course these says nothing to it's performance in a mastering
Of course these says nothing to it's performance in a mastering room... But, I took one of these out on tour so I could playback prerecorded tracks in high resolution for my electronic band. It was great. No problems to speak of.
However, durring that tour, I did stop to see a friend's mastering room... He had one there, and said he had all kinds of problems with it... but I dont recall specifics, something with the harddrive failing.. I think...
I thought it was funny that mine was in a DIY van-tour environment and performing well, while his was in this nice safe mastering room dying on him...
I think Roger Nichols endorses the Masterlink... haha.
After replacing a bad CD drive (failed after a couple of week's
After replacing a bad CD drive (failed after a couple of week's use) and upgrading the hard drive to 32gig, mine comes in handy if I have to do any off-site stereo recording. I have it mounted in a portable rack case with two Grace pre-amps. After recording a performance, I take back to the studio and dump the tracks to my DAW. I also use it to hold and play-back a few reference CDs while mixing/finalizing. As someone mentioned above, I don't know anyone that uses the on-board DSP functions for finalizing or mastering.
It has saved my butt a couple of times when, because of certain config. problems, I couldn't render down a mix on the DAW without getting dropouts, click, crackles, etc. I just routed the mix to the Masterlink via S-PDIF at 88.2-by-24 bit. Then, I routed it back to the DAW (staying in the digital domain the whole time) for polishing and finalizing.
Joe Crawford
Stony Mountain Studio
Shanks, WV 26761
Joe Crawford wrote: mine comes in handy if I have to do any off
Joe Crawford wrote: mine comes in handy if I have to do any off-site stereo recording. I have it mounted in a portable rack case
I'm with you there, Joe: mine is also in a flightcase along with my HEDD, and I use the combo to take to client studios for (mostly) analog transfers.
One producer I work with has a nice Focusrite-based residential, and I'm over there a couple of times a month taking mixes off 1/2". The HEDD has a very good ADC, and the ML is easy to use so it makes the transfers a breeze. When I get back to base I usually write CD24s from the hard drive, pop them in the SADiE and away we go - a good stop-gap to save me shelling out for analog machine for a while at least.
A question for Mark Wilder - how do you go about reclocking your ML? Does it take AES black? - I have a spare feed from my studio clock...
Ammitsboel wrote: Does it take AES black? Do you mean AES with o
Ammitsboel wrote:
Does it take AES black?Do you mean AES with only sync?
It takes a recloking device to get completely rid of jitter and reclock a signal.
Interesting - didn't know it did that but I RTFM and there it was on page 7. D'oh! This may be of academic interest only as at the moment the ML is stand-alone, doesn't play through the DAW (as posted previously I go in via CD24s) and is heard via my DAC-1 and not its own converters - I use the DAC-1's front panel switch to route either fom the SADiE (AES) or the ML (SPDIF) and this works well for reference purposes.
However -
I have wondered about changing my (all-digital) workflow, so using AES black (yes, it is sync-only, BTW) to the ML I can clock the whole lot to my reference clock and play the ML through the outboard rather than playing the SADiE out in a loop, thus saving a couple of steps. This would probably only apply to those jobs where the ML has been used to dump analog tapes to its hard drive - there'd be no advantage if I was sent a CDROM to work from. I can feel a digital router coming on!
We have one. I have a couple of clients who mix to the masterli
We have one. I have a couple of clients who mix to the masterlink. I haven't had any problems with it. I've been told there is another engineer here who uses it quite often. I always reclock it (AES).