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Hi guys - my first post here, so howdy.

I'm building a DAW - I've been playing guitar for many years, and even using DAWs for quite a few years, always low end with make do hardware. Now I'm in the position to build out a pretty decent spec machine, and I'm looking at audio interfaces.

My almost built computer is an i7, 16GB SSD beast. In previous DAWs I've used USB breakout boxes (like the Tascam US series) - it's something that I know, they have familiar inputs and user friendly twiddly bits. However, I'd like to use a PCIe interface this time, as I'm likely to get lower latency and few hisses and crackles that way.

I can see lots of PCIe cards on the market, but not many have the interface that I'm used to. Do I have to go really high-endto get that? Do these PCIe cards have a common bus that can plug into any breakout box?

Ideally I'd not want to spend more than £300/£400.

Cheers.

Mark.

Comments

markdemanbey Sat, 01/25/2014 - 10:50

Hi - I was mainly thinking about low latency/lack of noise. My understanding is that the rule of thumb was that the close the audio processing to the motherboard, the better the quality overall - please correct me if I'm wrong. If the best solution is Firewire or USB that's cool, because that's stuff I'm used to. However, a direct connection via PCIe intuitively sounds to me like it would be the better option...

rectifryer Sat, 01/25/2014 - 11:17

markdemanbey, post: 409987 wrote: Hi - I was mainly thinking about low latency/lack of noise. My understanding is that the rule of thumb was that the close the audio processing to the motherboard, the better the quality overall - please correct me if I'm wrong. If the best solution is Firewire or USB that's cool, because that's stuff I'm used to. However, a direct connection via PCIe intuitively sounds to me like it would be the better option...

You are spot on. However, I actually sold a PCIe card and started using a firewire device. It has a little more latency but since it has live monitoring it doesn't really matter for my purposes.

audiokid Sat, 01/25/2014 - 17:07

markdemanbey, post: 409987 wrote: Hi - I was mainly thinking about low latency/lack of noise. My understanding is that the rule of thumb was that the close the audio processing to the motherboard, the better the quality overall - please correct me if I'm wrong. If the best solution is Firewire or USB that's cool, because that's stuff I'm used to. However, a direct connection via PCIe intuitively sounds to me like it would be the better option...

Indeed. PCIe is all I use when concidering Midi and large track count. I also use the new Orion32 USB and its extremely low as well. FW is also a favourite.
PCIe is choice for both MADI and AES imho, oh, and MIDI.

RME cards are what I use however, there are other interfaces people like too. Choose the interface based on your requirements.

bouldersound Sat, 01/25/2014 - 20:26

markdemanbey, post: 409974 wrote: In previous DAWs I've used USB breakout boxes (like the Tascam US series) - it's something that I know, they have familiar inputs and user friendly twiddly bits. However, I'd like to use a PCIe interface this time, as I'm likely to get lower latency and few hisses and crackles that way.

What you're more likely to get is more channels in and out through the interface. Many 2-channel USB interfaces have an all analog input monitoring path. Latency doesn't get any lower than that.

markdemanbey Sat, 01/25/2014 - 23:21

bouldersound, post: 410000 wrote: What you're more likely to get is more channels in and out through the interface. Many 2-channel USB interfaces have an all analog input monitoring path. Latency doesn't get any lower than that.

Thanks - that's a fair point - but doesn't the latency still affect what's recorded? Analogue monitoring might be in real time, but what's actually committed to disk will be slightly out, right?

bouldersound Sat, 01/25/2014 - 23:49

markdemanbey, post: 410002 wrote: Thanks - that's a fair point - but doesn't the latency still affect what's recorded? Analogue monitoring might be in real time, but what's actually committed to disk will be slightly out, right?

No, record latency (or record offset in some DAWs) is different from input monitoring latency. If you loop back an existing track and record it to another track it should be very closely aligned, and if it's not there's a record latency (or offset) setting that can be adjusted to make it right. Input monitoring latency is the time lag between making a sound and hearing it back. While that can make the new track imperfectly aligned with the existing ones it is for a different reason, that you're hearing the sound delayed and so playing/singing it at the wrong time and the system is accurately representing that fact.

Hardware input monitoring comes in two varieties, analog and digital. The analog kind is simple but isn't practical with lots of inputs. The digital kind is more flexible to accommodate more inputs, and it has lower latency than software monitoring but is not true zero latency. Digital hardware input monitoring often has a software control panel but the signal is routed completely inside the interface, without a trip through the computer or DAW.