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The prices are spectacularly different, but what about the quality. I'm sure the Lynx is great, but I've only heard one comment about the Echo which was very complimentary.
Anyone out who has used both?

Comments

Cucco Tue, 03/11/2008 - 10:59

Hi Paul -

I'm not sure how much I can help here since I don't have exact experiences - but here's my experience and what I know:

I owned an Aurora 8 for a long time and loved it. I only got rid of it for an RME Fireface as an effort to keep my rig even smaller than it was and because the mixer on the Fireface smokes the Lynx. However, the sound of the Lynx, IMO, was beyond reproach.

I also owned a Mackie 800R which uses the same AKM chip and a similar path (since Mackie and Echo have collaborated on some of these projects). The Mackie conversion sounded phenomenal especially given its price point. Did it get to the level of the Lynx? Not quite. However, it was almost there. I never hesitated to use the two units side by side.

I can also tell you that I've dealt with Echo for a while for other products of theirs and always been pleased with their service and support.

As for Lynx's service and support - they might be some of the best in the biz. Last year at this time, I put in the LT-ADAT card and went to use the device for the first time while in the field. Well, I didn't configure it correctly and I had 30 minutes to get it straightened out.

The only internet connection I had was on my phone (Palm 700W). I called Lynx - they sent the necessary files to my phone and then called me back when I could take the memory stick out of my phone, load it into my Audio PC (on location) and walked me through the update and configuration.

It took 29:30 so I had 30 seconds to spare.

I don't know of too many other companies that would go through this much trouble for a single user that owns only a single product.

Cheers-
Jeremy

Cucco Tue, 03/11/2008 - 12:07

It wasn't quite as open as the Lynx. It was a minute difference and maybe totally related to the Mackie device versus the Echo.

I can tell you, I used (and still do) an Echo Mia for a VERY long time and the sound that this little inexpensive card gets is beyond anything that it should.

I wish they would start making a standalone unit or something that would convert Analog to lightpipe. I'd buy 2.

glitchless Wed, 03/12/2008 - 08:29

As I hate all ford products and always have it is a bad comparison, but I get your point.
As It turns out I was leaning toward the Audiofire and finally after years of looking made some sense of the RME fireface 800 and realized it was closer in quality to the lynx could record 10 distinct analog channels at once and offered 4 extra pres plus other digital i/o options. At less than half the price of the Lynx and as 10 channels is about the max I do at once this is the right product.

Cucco Wed, 03/12/2008 - 08:36

Well, if it was up to the RME versus the others....

I own a Fireface800 and friggin love it.

Bear in mind, you don't get 4 preamps plus the other 8 inputs or 10 inputs...
You get 2 preamps and 8 lines or 4 preamps and 6 lines or 2 preamps, 6 discrete lines and 2 channels where both the line input and the preamp are recorded to the same channel.

BTW - it sounds friggin fantastic.

Cucco Thu, 03/13/2008 - 07:34

Scott-

I take a little issue with the rather unqualified answers.

To simply dismiss the Echo for example...on what grounds. Have you owned, used or experimented with it?

Your comment regarding the Lynx versus the RME is about as useless as any I've ever seen.

What makes a converter a "better" AD/DA?

I've owned and used extensively both the RME and the Lynx side by side (along with the Mackie 800R - which uses similar analog components and the same AKM chip as the Echo) and none of them were dramatically different from one to another. In fact, I'm finding that the RME, if anything, has the edge over all of them, but only by a little. The Lynx has a very extended top end but is a tad lean on the bottom. The RME has none of the leanness but also doesn't extend quite as much as the Lynx. However, the Lynx showed the potential of brightness due to these characteristics where the RME does not.

glitchless Thu, 03/13/2008 - 08:41

The discussion will undoubtedly continue which is fine, but I did make a choice and ordered the RME as well as my new computer setup so for me it's all moot unless I need to add more converters which is unlikely.
Thank you all for contributing, I also read extensively on other sites for reviews etc...
Since I won't ever hear them in the same room recording the same material I had to go with a combination of head, gut, and bank account.

Guest Sat, 03/15/2008 - 10:37

Cucco wrote: Scott-

I take a little issue with the rather unqualified answers.

To simply dismiss the Echo for example...on what grounds. Have you owned, used or experimented with it?

Your comment regarding the Lynx versus the RME is about as useless as any I've ever seen.

What makes a converter a "better" AD/DA?

I've owned and used extensively both the RME and the Lynx side by side (along with the Mackie 800R - which uses similar analog components and the same AKM chip as the Echo) and none of them were dramatically different from one to another. In fact, I'm finding that the RME, if anything, has the edge over all of them, but only by a little. The Lynx has a very extended top end but is a tad lean on the bottom. The RME has none of the leanness but also doesn't extend quite as much as the Lynx. However, the Lynx showed the potential of brightness due to these characteristics where the RME does not.

1) i am talking about the Aurora AD/DA with the Lynx AES card (or RME AES) the AES does not do AD/DA
vs the RME FF 800

if you think the FF 800 compares to the Aurora well that tells me alot about your ears.

and i have near every audio interface (at least that counts) here in the store to compare side by side.

now if you are talking about the Lynx 2 vs RME ff thats another story.

Scott
ADK

Cucco Sat, 03/15/2008 - 12:31

ADK audio wrote: (1) i am talking about the Aurora AD/DA with the Lynx AES card (or RME AES) the AES does not do AD/DA
vs the RME FF 800

...

now if you are talking about the Lynx 2 vs RME ff thats another story.

No, I know exactly what you're talking about. I owned the Lynx Aurora 8 and AES 16 card for years. (One of the first adopters of their Aurora 8 - AES 16 owner since shortly after they introduced as well).

Their sound was great. Their interface (digital mixing) was clunky at best.

I find it interesting that you are comfortable putting up some of your products (whom I assume you are a licensed dealer) on a pedastal while others, you seem to berate. How do they feel about this coming from one of their dealers?

Guest Sat, 03/15/2008 - 13:02

LOL,

i have always highly recommended RME and Lynx.
and Motu now as well.

and yes the lynx mixer sucks compared to total mix or cue mix.
never mind adding 2 or more LYnx cards in the same box not it gets really odd.

as far as "berating"

i have always spoke my mind and what i feel to be the truth
just because i sell Echo (notice i dont have alot of their newer FW items up on my site)
does not mean i like them. (they are there mostly for people who use a software called SFX)

ther are other i sell that sound decent but are not low latency.

then thier are others i have removed like Emu and Edirol as i just plain wont sell them anymore.

in other words i dont play the politics game at all.
i shoot straight.

FYI i am the 3rd largest RME dealer in the US.
that does not stop me from saying the AD/DA on the Aurora is better than the FF 800.

given the choice considering price, routing, total mix total i/o and portablity and expandability the FF 800 is untouchable.

i sell alot more RME than i do Lynx
and in fact i prefer the RME AES with the LYnx Aurora when there is mulitple AES units due to the whole total mix thing.

at least you know i am not about sles pitch bullcrap!
:-)
Scott

Cucco Sat, 03/15/2008 - 13:51

ADK audio wrote:
FYI i am the 3rd largest RME dealer in the US.
that does not stop me from saying the AD/DA on the Aurora is better than the FF 800.

But that won't stop me from calling BS.

What makes one converter "better" than another?
What basis are you using for making this statement?

This isn't the first time you've been called on the line on this and other forums (Gearslutz for one) for making baseless statements like this.

If you could show me anything to back this statement up, I'll shut up.

Is the RME different than the Lynx and vice versa? Yes.

Is one inherently better? That's a [[url=http://[/URL]="http://dictionary.r…"]Subjective[/]="http://dictionary.r…"]Subjective[/] statement and has no basis in truth.

FWIW -
I did a null test on signals recorded by both the Lynx and the RME. I used the same 2-channel analog signal (in this case, a reference CD - "The Film Music of Jerry Goldsmith" by Telarc and the CPO) through a Neutrik patchbay with the signal split - 2 channels going to analog 1 and 2 of the Lynx and 2 channels going to analog 1 and 2 of the RME. The Lynx unit fed its signal through the LT-ADAT port into the ADAT input of the RME (which does not affect the incoming ADAT signal). Synchro-lock was disabled on the Lynx.

The two signals were virtually identical and nulled nearly completely leaving barely any audible trace whatsoever. Most was extremely High Frequency on only picked up on meters, not audibly and a tiny little bit of LF difference (so little, also only picked up by meters.)

I hardly think this makes such a noticable difference as to be able to declare one the reigning champ.

My whole point is -
subjective statements like this are useless and do not help anyone. It's the equivalent of stating that one mic pre is inherently better than another.

dterry Sat, 03/15/2008 - 17:04

Well, you guys might want to quantify what you mean by "difference". For some 5% implies everything, and for others, it's still just 5%. lol

I had the opportunity to hear the best of the best ADDAs side by side in a controlled shootout with some high end engineers a few years ago (hence no Fireface, or Aurora there) and the difference between RME's ADI series and Mytek, Cranesong, DCS, Apogee's high end at the time, etc was noticeable, but not as much as Scott seems to be implying, unless he doesn't think much of Lincolns (Lincoln as a high end car reference - really? lol Guess I'm not a Lincoln fan by any stretch....).

I haven't heard the Aurora yet, so I can't quantify this, but to imply the difference between the Fireface and Aurora is huge would be misleading unless the Aurora somehow sounds 10x better than a DCS or Cranesong (my favorite at the shootout - not as clinical as the Mytek, but also so very slightly behind the DCS and Prism for image and top end). The difference between good interfaces (Fireface, ADI, etc) and the $2-$3k high end (Apogee, Mytek, probably Aurora as well) is slight - about 3-5% imo - mostly top end clarity and smooth response right up to the edge of the frequency response - subjective very slight clarity in mids and bass, and imaging. The difference from RME to $10k converters is more, but still not more than 10%, depending on how you quantify "clarity" and smoothness of frequency response, and given that the last 10% can be quite a lot in engineering accuracy terms.

I would probably side with Jeremy's assessment more than yours Scott (no offense) since comments like "not quite as open" are closer to what I heard personally, and a roomful of high end engineers were saying as well (yes, it was nice to know I was hearing at that level - I wouldn't have assumed so otherwise).

No, the Fireface isn't going to sound like it cost $3k, and it doesn't, but it's a very good interface/converter.

Guest Sun, 03/16/2008 - 13:12

well now we are getting somewhere.

subjective is the keyword.

some poeple think the M-Audio BX5's sound good

i will be the first to say my ears suck (way too many concerts and loud rock and roll as a kid)

and again i never said the RME unit sucked i sell a boatload of them and recommend them over anything else EXCEPT the Aurora.

i was however negative about the Echo so lets get that part straight.

the OPs question was Echo or Aurora.
i stand behind my original statement
Caddy vs pinto or what ever i said.

i did not say this about RME vs Aurora.

and i dont give a rat's butt where or by who i get called on.

i have my opinions and you have yours. as you said subjective.

i made a statement answering the OPs question
then followed it by saying another vote for RME.
particularly in the "affordable" range
so back the hell off.

i have however yet to see someone claim the RME was as good as the aurora. well until now that is.

Dterry,

yes i agree 100% with high end gear you pay 100% more for 5% improvement.
for most people its not worth it (unless a Pro)
and even alot of those guys have only 8-16 "quality" i/o

my comments can be made due to the fact i have all these interfaces here, have played with and listened to all of them.
thru numerous studio monitors and various types of music.

(i do not have anything high end past Aurora or Apogee here)
and have only heard a few of the higher end (mytec)

Scott
ADK

Cucco Sun, 03/16/2008 - 14:23

You still don't answer my question and now you contradict yourself.

You suggest that "subjective" is the key word then you go on again to state that the Aurora is "better" than the RME.

How. Please explain to me how.

I have done more than 100 recordings with the RME and more than 500 with the Aurora. I feel as though I'm quite qualified to speak on their behalf. Yes, the RME is as good as a converter as the Lynx.

Would you like me to say that again?

THE RME IS AS GOOD AS A CONVERTER AS THE LYNX

Is it different? Yes. Is it flawed? Not a chance.

Does one have some advantage over the other? I would say yes in favor of the RME for ergonomics and features and yes in favor of the Lynx for support.

The Lynx is a more "open" sounding device with a leaner bottom end whereas the RME is a more rounded top end device with a fuller bottom end.

These are statements that evaluate the measurable and quantifiable differences between the two.

By no means is one "better" than another.

I'm glad to see that this one little argument can't come to a close because you can't simply see the fact that you're arguing an UNPROVABLE subjective opinion.

And, for the record, I'll be using an Echo AudioFire 12 within the next 2 weeks just for the sole purpose of judging their quality. I'm willing to bet you money that the difference between it and my higher end converters (Mytek (with a 'k', not a 'c') and Benchmark) as well as my RMEs is again subjective and barely the 5-10% referenced elsewhere in this post.

Feel free to come back again with "but the Lynx IS better than the RME..."
Every time you make an unqualified statement like that, people see more and more through them.

Guest Sun, 03/16/2008 - 15:06

what is your problem dude?

you yourself said its SUBJECTIVE.

my subjective statement has been made your subjective statement has been made.

we disagree so be it.
end of freaking discussion.
niether can be proven right or wrong.

that like arguing chocolate is better than vanilla.

this is worse than the PC vs MAC at least that had some qauntifyable results.

however your subjective statement is by far in the minority of those who have compared the 2.

so lets all go out and buy the cheapest sound card we can find as obviously they all sound the same to you.

Scott

Cucco Sun, 03/16/2008 - 16:10

Here's my problem, dude.

Your analogy - chocolate versus vanilla. Neither is better. I may prefer vanilla where you prefer chocolate. Still, neither is better.

In the case of the Lynx vs th RME, tell me ANYTHING that makes the Lynx better. They both use a similar power supply and both use a very similar analog and digital signal path and both are tightly packed SMT boards.

One sounds different than the other. It's that simple.

Show me any engineer that claims one to be better than the other and I'll call him/her an idiot to their faces. If they say that they prefer one over the other, fine.

The recording industry is full of people who claim that gear A is better than gear B and 90% of the time, it's just different. Yes, sometimes there's a substantial difference - one in build or design that sets it apart (such as the robust power supply and p2p wiring in the Crane Song) and may make it quantifiably better than another.

For you, someone who assumes a position of trust (by advertising here as an expert in your field, you assume this role) to come around throwing out statements as unqualified and careless as this is irresponsible and furthering the misunderstanding amongst younger or less experienced engineers.

In addition, you start off by insulting my ears because I don't agree with your opinion. Then you claim to have poor hearing yourself. Just what are you basing your rather biased decisions on then? CLearly someone else's opinion, reviews, price tags or whatever gets a higher profit margin I suppose?

Guest Mon, 03/17/2008 - 06:35

if you want to continue measuring your penis go right ahead, i am done.

i will only comment to 1 thing

"price tags or whatever gets a higher profit margin I suppose?"

you have obviously never called here.
we have never been about the money but rather customer service and whats best for your specific needs and work flow.
95% of the time a customer experiances "dont waste your money on upgrade a or b"

anyone who has bought from us will attest to this.

FYI after i toss in free cables for the Aurora (which is not included) the profit is the same.

Scott

Cucco Mon, 03/17/2008 - 06:49

Scott -
These petty attacks are annoying.
My first post to you said very nicely that I personally had issue with your blanket generalizations and gave you the opportunity to provide some background behind them. Instead, you attacked the inegrity of my hearing and backed up nothing with facts.
Now, instead of just providing any facts still, your claiming that we're having a cock war.
Get over yourslef man. Your ego is writing checks neither your intellect nor your ears can cash.

Also, feel free to quote me out of context again, I don't take it personally. The profit margins quote was one of a list of potential reasons. Besides, hasn't Lynx been offering that free cable deal for over a year now?

Seriously, if all you're going to do is dodge my question and levy personal attacks, I'm going to request this topic be locked.