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Hello,

I've just purchased a MacBook Pro 2018 with two thunderbolt 3 ports. I am new to this whole recording process and have Logic on my Mac. My question: what do you suggest as an audio interface? Does Thunderbolt 3 offer the lowest latency? Should I be purchasing an audio interface that can directly connect to my computer, or are adapters an acceptable solution? If I was to use adapters to say USB A - would this cause a dramatic change in latency?

I apologize for the many questions but I am very, very, very lost.
Any help is appreciated.

Thanks

Comments

Tony Carpenter Fri, 02/01/2019 - 00:29

Hi Tommy,

Unlike a windoze PC, Mac OS X uses a core audio api. The advantages of that are many. For your purpose of discussion most importantly you’ll want to worry about bandwidth, as manufacturers have gotten better USB is not a horrible solution. That being said, thunderbolt is by far more robust and latency friendly.

By robust, I mean bandwidth and speeds. Budget will ultimately determine your choice, universal audio makes amazing interfaces with large variations of cost. We then have RME and others. Most good brands allow direct monitoring through their hardware. That means near zero latency as you record and playback. Gone are the days of needing software monitoring.

That’ll give you plenty to mull over :).

Tony

Boswell Fri, 02/01/2019 - 03:04

Tommy Smith, post: 460330, member: 51521 wrote: I've just purchased a MacBook Pro 2018 with two thunderbolt 3 ports. I am new to this whole recording process and have Logic on my Mac. My question: what do you suggest as an audio interface? Does Thunderbolt 3 offer the lowest latency? Should I be purchasing an audio interface that can directly connect to my computer, or are adapters an acceptable solution? If I was to use adapters to say USB A - would this cause a dramatic change in latency?

As Tony has indicated, I would not get hung up on latency. What exactly are you planning to do that would demand low latency via the computer?

There are many other factors that also determine the model of audio interface that you should purchase. If you feel obliged only to consider Thunderbolt (2/3), then your options are more limited, but nevertheless your should give weight to at least the following:
• Cost
• Number of microphone input channels needed for your type of work
• Number of line input channels needed (not routed through pre-amps)
• Pre-amp gain if you are considering certain dynamic microphones such as ribbon and low-output moving-coil
• Number of output channels, both for monitoring via speakers and headphones, and for feeding external effects units
• Expansion inputs and outputs via ADAT optical or via S/PDIF optical or coaxial
• Internal routeability within the interface, e.g. send an amplified microphone input to an analogue output

Can you tell us a little about what you are wanting to record, and what other equipment you have (microphones etc)?

kmetal Fri, 02/01/2019 - 12:15

Makzimia, post: 460336, member: 48344 wrote: Unlike a windoze PC, Mac OS X uses a core audio api. The advantages of that are many.

Like what?

Makzimia, post: 460336, member: 48344 wrote: For your purpose of discussion most importantly you’ll want to worry about bandwidth,

Bandwidth really isnt a concern since a typical audio interface doesnt saturate even a usb 2 audio connection. It isnt until you get upwards of 24 simultaneous i/o that bandwidth becomes a concern.

Fwiw the current crop of TB2/3 interfaces arent posting latency specs much (or at all) lower than usb, which are all around 3ms at 96k on the better designs. Some UAD pluggins also add latency as well.

Tommy Smith, post: 460330, member: 51521 wrote: Should I be purchasing an audio interface that can directly connect to my computer, or are adapters an acceptable solution?

Adapters may work, if they do you will be reduced to whatever the lowest speed connection is in the chain. Its best to have an adapter free connection to avoid potential incompatibilities and flaky connections. If you intend on using one its essential to verify with the manufacturer that it will work.

Tony Carpenter Fri, 02/01/2019 - 12:33

kmetal, post: 460345, member: 37533 wrote: Like what?

Like not needing drivers, like true multi device support.

Bandwidth really isnt a concern since a typical audio interface doesnt saturate even a usb 2 audio connection. It isnt until you get upwards of 24 simultaneous i/o that bandwidth becomes a concern.

Fwiw the current crop of TB2/3 interfaces arent posting latency specs much (or at all) lower than usb, which are all around 3ms at 96k on the better designs. Some UAD pluggins also add latency as well.

Bandwidth includes recording khz rate and bit rate. E.G. Newest standards of 32bit native (new steinberg) 384khz. Yes if we look at a software issue, it's a different thing. On live recording, and monitoring, there is no extra latency, in my experience (hardware monitoring). And as I already stated, USB has come a long way :). I still wouldn't trust all USB controllers to behave together though along with a USB audio interface, issues of mouse movement noise etc still exist from what I have seen. If you are fully in control of all your bits, well then as you know Kyle different kettle of fish.

dvdhawk Fri, 02/01/2019 - 12:45

Welcome to RO, Tommy. If you're looking for an interface that is native to your MBP's USB-C / Thunderbolt 3 connectivity, Universal Audio and PreSonus (and probably others) make interfaces that can take advantage of the data transfer rate of the USB-C. Again, not much more to add without knowing more about your goals - as pcrecord has said. (regarding level of production, budget, number of channels, etc.).

Best of luck.

kmetal Fri, 02/01/2019 - 12:59

Makzimia, post: 460346, member: 48344 wrote: On live recording, and monitoring, there is no extra latency, in my experience (hardware monitoring).

Hardware monitoring is the same absence of latency regardless of connection type.

Makzimia, post: 460346, member: 48344 wrote: Like not needing drivers, like true multi device support.

Asio4all allows aggregation of devices, and drivers arent really a much of a big deal, they can be veiwed as a good thing in some cases since it gives manufacturers a way to improve device performance, without an OS update.

When you said "many" advantages i thought maybe i was missing something good lol.

Makzimia, post: 460346, member: 48344 wrote: I still wouldn't trust all USB controllers to behave together though along with a USB audio interface, issues of mouse movement noise etc still exist from what I have seen.

Yeah USB audio devices are still best plugged into a port that has is on its own bus to the motherboards usb controller.

Im actually surprised TB isnt performing better than usb since its directly connected to the pcie lanes, and the usb controller has a lower priority to the cpu. Hopefully in short time it will be performing as well as pcie cards.

kmetal Fri, 02/01/2019 - 13:04

dvdhawk, post: 460347, member: 36047 wrote: PreSonus (and probably others) make interfaces that can take advantage of the data transfer rate of the USB-C.

Ive read the presonua quantum has some of the lowest latency available right now.

Also another option, is to use a TB3 chasis connected to the macbook and using a pcie card based interface or connection. This allows things like pro tools hdx, burl, and other card based systems to be used.

Dante and AVB are also worth mentioning since its a simple ethernet connections.

cyrano Tue, 02/05/2019 - 17:32

kmetal, post: 460348, member: 37533 wrote:
Asio4all allows aggregation of devices, and drivers arent really a much of a big deal, they can be veiwed as a good thing in some cases since it gives manufacturers a way to improve device performance, without an OS update.

When you said "many" advantages i thought maybe i was missing something good lol

Asio4all isn't comparable. It's a bandaid if all else fails. It's just a wrapper around another driver.

Core audio offers a lot of things, like on the fly resampling. Suppose your DAW is set to 48 kHz, but you want to listen to another application that plays back at 44.1. Core audio resamples without any user intervention. Most ASIO drivers on Windows don't even allow several programs to play back at the same time, let alone at a different sample rate.

You've probably never tried aggregation. It barely works on Windows, except with quality gear from a few manufacrurers and provided you use interfaces that use the same ASIO driver. It doesn't always work on Macs either, but it works in 95% of the cases.

I can switch audio device, channel or sample rate from the command line. Which means I can do it from any macro tool, or scripting language. And even remotely, from another machine on the network. Good luck with that on Windows.

I can also send audio and/or video to any other Mac, iPad or even a router with audio output.

Ethernet AVB works out of the box with every Mac.

In general, it's a relief to have one audio system that works, in stead of 5 to try (Windows) or 2 to choose from (Linux).

Also, drivers are a very big deal. Win 10 was released without a UAC2 driver. Because of that, many people bought a new interface after upgrading to Win 10, only to find out later Microsoft changed it's mind and did release a driver. By then, it was too late and the mountain of obsolete hardware got a bit higher. The wallet a little flatter.

I could go on, but you probably get the drift :D

cyrano Tue, 02/05/2019 - 17:57

Tommy Smith, post: 460330, member: 51521 wrote: Hello,

I've just purchased a MacBook Pro 2018 with two thunderbolt 3 ports. I am new to this whole recording process and have Logic on my Mac. My question: what do you suggest as an audio interface? Does Thunderbolt 3 offer the lowest latency? Should I be purchasing an audio interface that can directly connect to my computer, or are adapters an acceptable solution? If I was to use adapters to say USB A - would this cause a dramatic change in latency?

I apologize for the many questions but I am very, very, very lost.
Any help is appreciated.

Thanks

Don't wory about latency. As Boswell said, it's about the number of simultaneous channels you need.

A big consideration, at least for me, is longivety of drivers. If the manufacturer is known to drop support soon after production stop, you'll need to buy new or you won't be able to upgrade your operating system. That might be fine, I'm one of the dinosaurs known to be always behind, but sooner or later you'll find some piece of software forcing you to upgrade. In my case, it was the browser forcing me from Mavericks to El Capital.

Whem it comes to drivers, RME is king. Their entire product line runs the same version. There's no other manufacturer that still supports even their oldest gear from 15 years ago. Yes, they're expensive, but they last longer than any other brand, so they get cheap in the long run.

Ten years ago, when I needed occasionally to work with RME gear, I hated it. When I boughtone myself and invested the time to learn how to work with Totalmix and Digicheck, I loved it. Today, I can't miss it. It isn't only the recording part, it's also replaced most of my measuring gear. None of the interfaces I've owned before were suited for measurements. The FF400 with Digicheck allows for 90% of the measurements I need, because of the digital gain control of the preamps. 54 dB is exactly 54 dB.

Don't worry about USB-C adapters. Get the Apple ones, these always work for audio. Don't let Thunderbolt guide your decision.

kmetal Wed, 02/06/2019 - 17:43

cyrano, post: 460361, member: 51139 wrote: Asio4all isn't comparable. It's a bandaid if all else fails. It's just a wrapper around another driver.

My experience with it is it worked fine. I know several others who have had good experience with it.

cyrano, post: 460361, member: 51139 wrote: Core audio offers a lot of things, like on the fly resampling. Suppose your DAW is set to 48 kHz, but you want to listen to another application that plays back at 44.1. Core audio resamples without any user intervention. Most ASIO drivers on Windows don't even allow several programs to play back at the same time, let alone at a different sample rate.

No issues streaming youtube while monitoring amp sims via reaper learning cover tunes on a core 2 duo latop in windows XP, m-audio fw610 interface.

cyrano, post: 460361, member: 51139 wrote: You've probably never tried aggregation

Never needed to on windows machines.

cyrano, post: 460361, member: 51139 wrote: I can switch audio device, channel or sample rate from the command line. Which means I can do it from any macro tool, or scripting language. And even remotely, from another machine on the network. Good luck with that on Windows.

Remote desktop??

cyrano, post: 460361, member: 51139 wrote: Also, drivers are a very big deal. Win 10 was released without a UAC2 driver. Because of that, many people bought a new interface after upgrading to Win 10, only to find out later Microsoft changed it's mind and did release a driver. By then, it was too late and the mountain of obsolete hardware got a bit higher. The wallet a little flatter.

Let the buyer beware. Obsolensence isnt relagated to just windows. Ever pay 1k to upgrade an apogee card to go 64 bit? What about avid forcing new hardware for 64bit os. Ever pay 4k for a mac thats non upgradeable and overheats, or 2k for a brand new imac thats 2 gen behind? That's a great way to flatten wallets.

cyrano, post: 460361, member: 51139 wrote: In general, it's a relief to have one audio system that works, in stead of 5 to try (Windows) or 2 to choose from (Linux).

You sound like a hater sir. Ive had no issues with windows besides the notoriously terrible pro tools 7.3 le. Ive used mac pros daily and pcs as well. They are equally useful, relaible, and buggy. From the days of g5's to sony 900hz sony vio pcs, to a 500mhz celeron, to an 8 core mac pro, ive made records with all of them just fine. A comparable mac vs comparable pc, will work just as well. Your statement is a blanket critisism that does not reflect my experiences. Im not a computer programmer, but i am a pro audio engineer and studio builder. Perhaps you missed the interview with Hans Zimmers right hand man (junkie xl) where he employs a 4x mac minis, and 10 core intel slaves, in his rig to compose for film.

Ive run samplitude, ozone, and BFD 3, on an AMD a6 laptop, and a 60$ windows 10 tablet, and blutooth speaker.

The notion that macs work and pcs dont is obsolete. By the time windows 7 came about, and macs went intel, the main difference became whats a better value financially speaking, and does your favorite software work on the platform. The latter not being an issue since windows and osx work on either type of machine.

When the 2nd mac g5 blew up in 08, it was cheaper to replace the entire computer than replace the power supply. What about the days of overpriced server memory that did nothing for audio, and increased memory latency.

Considering the system im brewing is a 16 core master, 2x 8 core slaves, and 6 core mastering machine, with combined 288 gigs of ram, and all nvme storage, cost less than a coffee scam mac pro, ive hedged my bets that a 4x Pc audio system is grossly superior to any mac in every way. Audio wise, value wise, and future upgradability wise.

I humbly disagree with your notion.

cyrano, post: 460364, member: 51139 wrote: Don't wory about latency.

This is a confusing stance you and boswell share. Using an extremely low latency system is critical to many musicians. From a cue fx built into the interface, to dsp driven digital mixers, to analog, to hardware monitoring, there is never a case where latency is a good thing. Tolerated is one thing, but "dont worry about it" is a bit extreme. Maybe you meant most new interfaces and drivers (if needed) have reasonable latency? Or maybe you meant dont worry aboyt latency if your just mixing?

Low latency at any stage of the project is esssential for tracking, regardless of how its acheived. Nobody wants to try and negotiate with a 512+ buffer size to overdub audio or vsti during a mix, or record flat via hardware monitoring.

Its my experience that low latency is essential in a professional scenario, and highly preffered in all others.

Boswell Thu, 02/07/2019 - 02:51

kmetal, post: 460375, member: 37533 wrote: This is a confusing stance you and boswell share. Using an extremely low latency system is critical to many musicians. From a cue fx built into the interface, to dsp driven digital mixers, to analog, to hardware monitoring, there is never a case where latency is a good thing. Tolerated is one thing, but "dont worry about it" is a bit extreme. Maybe you meant most new interfaces and drivers (if needed) have reasonable latency? Or maybe you meant dont worry aboyt latency if your just mixing?

Low latency at any stage of the project is esssential for tracking, regardless of how its acheived. Nobody wants to try and negotiate with a 512+ buffer size to overdub audio or vsti during a mix, or record flat via hardware monitoring.

Its my experience that low latency is essential in a professional scenario, and highly preffered in all others.

For live performance, I would wholeheartedly agree with you.

For studio use, and especially overdubs, I use whatever buffer size is needed to guarantee no glitches or dropped samples, both on the record and the replay tracks.

I used to do much of this work on Alesis HD24s, and working with them spoilt me for what was possible, and what sample-accurate overdubbing meant. It has taken years for DAWs to catch up reliably with the HD24 performance, but now most of them can not only give zero latency for overdubbing, but they can also test-measure a round-trip through external effects units, and take any additional delays in them into account when generating the necessary negative time figures.

cyrano Thu, 02/07/2019 - 03:42

kmetal, post: 460375, member: 37533 wrote: My experience with it is it worked fine. I know several others who have had good experience with it.

I never said it didn't work, just that it isn't a driver, but a wrapper for another driver. It adds a number of possibilities, like aggregating devices. However, some ASIO drivers don't work with it.

I don't know how many work or don't work. I do know however, a lot of Windows users don't seem to get it to work.

In macOS, OTOH, it's a part of the system. And most users are able to get it to work. There are a few interfaces out there that don't work with aggregation, but these are rare cases. The only manufacturer that doesn't support it explicitly, is Tascam. It doesn't mean it doesn't work, it just means "don't call Tascam if it doesn't work. Despite that, I've gotten some Tascam interfaces to aggregrate without a hitch.

No issues streaming youtube while monitoring amp sims via reaper learning cover tunes on a core 2 duo latop in windows XP, m-audio fw610 interface.

Again, I never said it couldn't be done. It's just something that doesn't work out of the box for some users.

And it's funny. The latest Windows system that I got to troubleshoot had just that problem. The user was knowledgeable and had a workaround, so it took me a while to go see.

When I got there, I was baffled. All settings were OK. I figured the interface might be dead. But it wasn't.

I was going over the Windows sound system. So I took a peek at the mixer. All faders were up. No sound. I moved one fader down a bit, and yahoo! Sound. Moved it back and the sound was still there.

It's hundreds of cases like this, over the years that make me say the Windows sound system is less solid than Core audio.

Never needed to on windows machines.

That's why you THINK it works well. Usually, it doesn't.

Remote desktop??

LOL.

Let the buyer beware. Obsolensence isnt relagated to just windows. Ever pay 1k to upgrade an apogee card to go 64 bit? What about avid forcing new hardware for 64bit os. Ever pay 4k for a mac thats non upgradeable and overheats, or 2k for a brand new imac thats 2 gen behind? That's a great way to flatten wallets.

I never said obsolescence was a Windows thing. I was saying that about drivers in general.

You sound like a hater sir. Ive had no issues with windows besides the notoriously terrible pro tools 7.3 le.

I'm sorry if you got that impression.

I've been dealing and building computers for over 40 years. I don't care what system they use. I've also managed fleets.

It's not because YOU have no problems that problems don't exist. We weren't talking about Windows in general, but about sound systems.

I've built literally hundreds of servers with all sort of OS'es. For servers, I prefer Linux or BSD. Of course, servers don't have a sound system, so it's hardly relevant, is it.

I've also done years of user support and trouble shooting, including a lot of AV systems. And that's including Silicon Graphics workstations, Atari's and Commodore. But that's the past.

Ive used mac pros daily and pcs as well. They are equally useful, relaible, and buggy. From the days of g5's to sony 900hz sony vio pcs, to a 500mhz celeron, to an 8 core mac pro, ive made records with all of them just fine. A comparable mac vs comparable pc, will work just as well.

Good for you. My G5 died a week ago. The G4 I use for data recovery with SCSI disks is still going strong. I hope. Haven't fired it up in over a year :D

Your statement is a blanket critisism that does not reflect my experiences. Im not a computer programmer, but i am a pro audio engineer and studio builder. Perhaps you missed the interview with Hans Zimmers right hand man (junkie xl) where he employs a 4x mac minis, and 10 core intel slaves, in his rig to compose for film.

Nope. Haven't seen it. But I've built systems like that. Including a 256 Linux server farm for rendering. In 1998.

Ive run samplitude, ozone, and BFD 3, on an AMD a6 laptop, and a 60$ windows 10 tablet, and blutooth speaker.

Mmmm... I'd never use BT speakers. But that's not really relevant either, is it?

The notion that macs work and pcs dont is obsolete.

I've never said that. Where did you read that?

It was about Core audio. Of course, Windows and Linux sound systems work too. It's the amount of work that's needed to keep them running that's wildly different. When you compare Core audio to the other systems, it's like comparing a VW beetle to a Lotus. Sure there's millions of beetles out there, and they'll get you to your destination, but it's not the same drive as a Lotus, is it?

By the time windows 7 came about, and macs went intel, the main difference became whats a better value financially speaking, and does your favorite software work on the platform. The latter not being an issue since windows and osx work on either type of machine.

Again, I never said anything about that.

I've managed fleets of several hundred machines. 70% Windows, 25% Macs, 5% Linux, roughly. Costs were comparable, because Macs outlasted Windows machines. I never could figure out why, as it's roughly the same hardware. But they did. I always figured it was because Mac users treat their machines better, but it could as well be some Windows users got so frustrated with their machines, they literally threw them out the window.

Mind you, I'm equally critical of all platforms. And the three major OS'es all seem to have lost a lot of reliability the last 5 years or so. They seem to need our data, or so I've been told.

When the 2nd mac g5 blew up in 08, it was cheaper to replace the entire computer than replace the power supply.

If you to Apple repair, you'll get robbed. Sad fact, but a fact. I've done computer repair for a few years, for Apple and other brands. They're all bastards. We had to sue HP, fi, to get screen cables for laptops. HP only wanted to sell us complete screen assemblies. But, hey, that was last century. No longer my problem :D

What about the days of overpriced server memory that did nothing for audio, and increased memory latency.

I spose you mean ECC memory?

Because of what it is, ECC ram will always have a higher latency and be slower and more expensive. But it was only used in the now defunct Xserve.

If you mean the Mac Pro's strange setup, yes that will give you higher latency, unless, of course, you RTFM.

Considering the system im brewing is a 16 core master, 2x 8 core slaves, and 6 core mastering machine, with combined 288 gigs of ram, and all nvme storage, cost less than a coffee scam mac pro, ive hedged my bets that a 4x Pc audio system is grossly superior to any mac in every way. Audio wise, value wise, and future upgradability wise.

I humbly disagree with your notion.

It all depends on your needs. If your time is very cheap, you might want to tinker. If, OTOH, your time is expensive, you might want to buy off the shelf.

It's true that a lot of AV professionals no longer look at Apple as the only solution. Apple has fucked up royally, lately. Too busy selling iPhones, I guess. And they seem to have the ambition to turn into a bank. Well, that's life.

It's also why I'm pretty excited Linux is finally, finally getting somewhere for audio. Reaper is available for Linux these days. And since nothing is more configurable and scriptable, I'll be setting up a Linux box. I'm a little sad it couldn't be BSD, but hey, that's life. Can't always get what you want.

There's even a Puppy/Slackware USB stick out there with Reaper, configured for very low latency audio. It's 49$ and runs on (almost) everything. I'll be testing that too, if time allows.

This is a confusing stance you and boswell share. Using an extremely low latency system is critical to many musicians. From a cue fx built into the interface, to dsp driven digital mixers, to analog, to hardware monitoring, there is never a case where latency is a good thing. Tolerated is one thing, but "dont worry about it" is a bit extreme. Maybe you meant most new interfaces and drivers (if needed) have reasonable latency? Or maybe you meant dont worry aboyt latency if your just mixing?

Yep. It's a personal thing. I don't record rock bands. I don't need to supply monitoring, or the monitoring isn't important. In my case, latency doesn't matter at all. But I understand that for some live setups, it is very, very important. I was under the impression, however, that the OP was just recording. Maybe I'm wrong?

Low latency at any stage of the project is esssential for tracking, regardless of how its acheived. Nobody wants to try and negotiate with a 512+ buffer size to overdub audio or vsti during a mix, or record flat via hardware monitoring.

There's still a world out there. Nobody recording classical, commentary, or jazz, fi, would even think about adding effects WHILE recording. You can do that in post.

In fact, it's quite funny how these worlds differ. With classical music, vocal mics are usually SDC's, not LDC's. They're usually omni, not cardio. And they're usually at least half a meter from the vocalist. Makes the engineer's job a lot harder. Of course, autotune isn't needed :D

Its my experience that low latency is essential in a professional scenario, and highly preffered in all others.

I think that should read "opinion" in stead of "experience". Unless you always rock, of course... :D

kmetal Thu, 02/07/2019 - 14:46

cyrano, post: 460384, member: 51139 wrote: It's not because YOU have no problems that problems don't exist. We weren't talking about Windows in general, but about sound systems

I wish ive had no problems. My point was problems gave been equal with both platforms. Different problems, but similar levels of reliability.

cyrano, post: 460384, member: 51139 wrote: Mmmm... I'd never use BT speakers. But that's not really relevant either, is it?

I did it mainly for a test to see what the breaking point of an under powered system was. BT speakers can be fun, try it some time :)

cyrano, post: 460384, member: 51139 wrote: I've never said that. Where did you read that?

I was referring to your comment about rather having a machine that works (mac) than 5 windows and 2 liniux that didnt.

cyrano, post: 460384, member: 51139 wrote: It was about Core audio. Of course, Windows and Linux sound systems work too. It's the amount of work that's needed to keep them running that's wildly different. When you compare Core audio to the other systems, it's like comparing a VW beetle to a Lotus. Sure there's millions of beetles out there, and they'll get you to your destination, but it's not the same drive as a Lotus, is it?

Fair enough. I think most if the issues however stem from user error, or unqualified machines. A person has to know how to handle there beetle or lotus. So in that regard core audio is more convenient.

cyrano, post: 460384, member: 51139 wrote: It all depends on your needs. If your time is very cheap, you might want to tinker. If, OTOH, your time is expensive, you might want to buy off the shelf.

My time is average price. Off the shelf is fine if it does the job. There are benefits and drawbacks to both. Cost, power availability, parts availability, service ability. Its nice to not need some overpriced eh hem, apple brand tool, just to swap out a psu.

Much depends on the scale and scope of the buisness.

cyrano, post: 460384, member: 51139 wrote: It's also why I'm pretty excited Linux is finally, finally getting somewhere for audio. Reaper is available for Linux these days

Me too!

cyrano, post: 460384, member: 51139 wrote: There's still a world out there. Nobody recording classical, commentary, or jazz, fi, would even think about adding effects WHILE recording. You can do that in post.

If your Al Schmitt your not even adding effects in post.

cyrano, post: 460384, member: 51139 wrote: I think that should read "opinion" in stead of "experience". Unless you always rock, of course...

I do always rock, but my engineering experiences stem from anything from top 40, blues, pop, folk, to hip hop. Pretty much everything but jazz and classical. I like classical and jazz, just havent been behind the boards for it.

My preference for recording myself/my bands, is live off the floor, no headphones. When doing my own demos and mixing i lean on the computers power for vsti ect.

I loved tbe ability the mackie D8B allowed to added effects/processing, in realtime, whenever the moment of inspiration occured. It allowed mixing happen during tracking, in the moment.

Since my time is average price, im expected to work quickly, so mixing as i go is a great benefit when i have a digital mixer w dsp, a powerful computer, ect. I feel that working hard on cue mixes can be wasteful, when its possible to apply the processing directly one way or the other.

I can see if your just doing purist recordings, with no Vsti, and vocalists in either natural ambience, or those who prefer dry, then latency is a non factor. I would say it is my opinion, based on my experience (lol) and research, that this would be more of a niche, than typical workload for a commercial studio. Id always want to be able to supply low or no latency vsti, cue mix effects, watever, if i was required. Id rather have it and not need it, than need it and not have it. Theres nothing worse than telling a client i dont know how, or explaining the systems limitations dont allow their preffered methods. Thats no fun.

As an aside, i want to mention i dont claim to know it all, or be a computer guru either. My main point was that with regard to audio neither platform has much of a distinct advantage especially when comparing equal machines. Imho there about the same, small differences aside.

Maybe the OP will respond with more detail about their intents, to narrow down what would work well.

kmetal Thu, 02/07/2019 - 14:59

Boswell, post: 460382, member: 29034 wrote: used to do much of this work on Alesis HD24s, and working with them spoilt me for what was possible, and what sample-accurate overdubbing meant.

How can a person verify that my daw is doing sample accurate overdubs? Would this change if i alter the session settings, or if cpu usage gets above a certain threshold, or if an effect is zero latency or not? Or if an effect is just added to an insert?

My whole design philosophy on the new rig was to allow a native system to have the convienience of a dsp based system, and perform on vsti at any point in the project. Things like ozones vocal synth effect have some super cool creative possibilities for vocal mangling.

Sorry to OP if ive sidetracked the thread to much.

Boswell Thu, 02/07/2019 - 15:39

kmetal, post: 460387, member: 37533 wrote: How can a person verify that my daw is doing sample accurate overdubs? Would this change if i alter the session settings, or if cpu usage gets above a certain threshold, or if an effect is zero latency or not? Or if an effect is just added to an insert?

A simple method is to replay a single track and feed it back (in the digital domain) into a recording track with a polarity change. Then sum the two tracks. They should be identically zero.

If you alter anything in the chain for a track, you have to re-calibrate the latency compensation for that track. Most DAWs do this automatically for anything internal to the DAW.

cyrano Fri, 02/08/2019 - 00:43

kmetal, post: 460386, member: 37533 wrote: I did it mainly for a test to see what the breaking point of an under powered system was. BT speakers can be fun, try it some time :)

Funnily, I am playing around with BT. My recording rack has input for landlines. I need to add inputs for smartphones. Looks easy, over BT. But it isn't smooth sailing yet if you want to add 2 or more.

But we'll see. There's no hurry.

I was referring to your comment about rather having a machine that works (mac) than 5 windows and 2 liniux that didnt.

Sorry, badly written.

Again, it was about sound systems. macOS only has one. Windows has 5 of them (ASIO, Wasapi...). Confusing for the non-techie.

Fair enough. I think most if the issues however stem from user error, or unqualified machines. A person has to know how to handle there beetle or lotus. So in that regard core audio is more convenient.

I suspect most of the issues with working sound systems come from updates that change some preference somewhere. Strangely, that started happening on macOS too, but not for the sound settings. It started when Apple took to the cloud. And it's ruining the macOS experience.

If your Al Schmitt your not even adding effects in post.

I don't add effects a lot of the time, even in post. I believe 99% of the magic is in the recording. And I've seen a few of the big names in mixing either also not doing it, or coming back from using a lot of effects.

Of course, if the vocalist is out of tune and you need to deliver, you've got not much of a choice.

I hope to record John Fairhurst on sunday, if the contract allows for it. The people organising the gig hadn't even considered recording it. It'll probably end in a disagreement about licenses, I'm afraid. For the rest, I'm just assisting the FOH engineer, as it is our gear they're using.

I do always rock, but my engineering experiences stem from anything from top 40, blues, pop, folk, to hip hop. Pretty much everything but jazz and classical. I like classical and jazz, just havent been behind the boards for it.

My preference for recording myself/my bands, is live off the floor, no headphones. When doing my own demos and mixing i lean on the computers power for vsti ect.

I loved tbe ability the mackie D8B allowed to added effects/processing, in realtime, whenever the moment of inspiration occured. It allowed mixing happen during tracking, in the moment.

That's one Mackie I've been looking at. But they're scarce here.

I've got a digital mixer. A 20 year old one from Korg. It's mainly used to route things around. And to provide real faders if someone else needs to work my system.

Since my time is average price, im expected to work quickly, so mixing as i go is a great benefit when i have a digital mixer w dsp, a powerful computer, ect. I feel that working hard on cue mixes can be wasteful, when its possible to apply the processing directly one way or the other.

I can see if your just doing purist recordings, with no Vsti, and vocalists in either natural ambience, or those who prefer dry, then latency is a non factor. I would say it is my opinion, based on my experience (lol) and research, that this would be more of a niche, than typical workload for a commercial studio. Id always want to be able to supply low or no latency vsti, cue mix effects, watever, if i was required. Id rather have it and not need it, than need it and not have it. Theres nothing worse than telling a client i dont know how, or explaining the systems limitations dont allow their preffered methods. Thats no fun.

Oh, it's a niche allright. It's also non-profit. We provide advice, services and gear for all kinds of art happenings. Can go from something as simple as sound for a movie projection to full out FOH for several stages. And anything in between, like theater.

As an aside, i want to mention i dont claim to know it all, or be a computer guru either. My main point was that with regard to audio neither platform has much of a distinct advantage especially when comparing equal machines. Imho there about the same, small differences aside.

Since I don't need VST's (while recording) and never do VSTi, I can get by with a "meager" machine. The one I currently use is just a ten year old Core2Duo.

Maybe the OP will respond with more detail about their intents, to narrow down what would work well.

That's what I was waiting for too.

kmetal Fri, 02/08/2019 - 17:21

cyrano, post: 460394, member: 51139 wrote: Looks easy, over BT. But it isn't smooth sailing yet if you want to add 2 or more.

I think the latest bt version maxes out at 2 devices, i could be wrong. Ive had reasonable luck with those little BT to stereo (trs) receivers into and out of a scarlett, i cant say id trust it for anything critical.

cyrano, post: 460394, member: 51139 wrote: I suspect most of the issues with working sound systems come from updates that change some preference somewhere. Strangely, that started happening on macOS too, but not for the sound settings. It started when Apple took to the cloud. And it's ruining the macOS experience.

Excellent point. I went on hiatus 3 years back just as the studio was upgrading to 64 bit os. Ive grown to just assume im going to have to re optomize windows each update. Even installing or updating software has screwed w my settings before.

Im trying something with this new rig, where i keep one computer seperate and install all.my software on it, and test updates ect before it goes into the main system as needed.

At some point i hope audio engineers can work with dedicated audio machines more like the old hard disk recorders, or standalone recorders.

cyrano, post: 460394, member: 51139 wrote: I believe 99% of the magic is in the recording.

Agreed. Get it at the source!

cyrano, post: 460394, member: 51139 wrote: I hope to record John Fairhurst on sunday, if the contract allows for it. The people organising the gig hadn't even considered recording it. It'll probably end in a disagreement about licenses, I'm afraid. For the rest, I'm just assisting the FOH engineer, as it is our gear they're using.

Fingers crossed for ya. I think one of my former co workers has some live aerosmith reel to reels laying around somewhere from the early 80s.

Considering how much iphone footage/audio makes it to the web, youd think artists/management would welcome more legitly tracked stuff from FOH.

cyrano, post: 460394, member: 51139 wrote: That's one Mackie I've been looking at. But they're scarce here.

Great workflow, good sound, tho not the most relaible with age. We had three of them. I suspect humidity also played a roll.

Someone with your experience level would probably have no issue with their issues. The psu is a 366mhz pc basically. My boss was pretty hands off and i lack true expertise in the hardware repair/building, which im learning slowly.

Super fun and easy board to work with when its running well. Around here their uber cheap.

cyrano, post: 460394, member: 51139 wrote: Oh, it's a niche allright. It's also non-profit. We provide advice, services and gear for all kinds of art happenings. Can go from something as simple as sound for a movie projection to full out FOH for several stages. And anything in between, like theater.

Excellent. Ive actually been planning something very similar to that myself, since my life circumstances have changed a couple years back. I want to give underprivileged artists a basic facility of gear, mentoring, ect.

Best of luck on your gig!

cyrano, post: 460394, member: 51139 wrote: Since I don't need VST's (while recording) and never do VSTi, I can get by with a "meager" machine. The one I currently use is just a ten year old Core2Duo.

Awsome! Took me several years and hundreds of dollars to realize that pt7 was just poorly written and my core 2 duo laptop was just fine. I actually threw it out just last summer.

I always argue that computers can usually always do what they did so its up to the owner to really decide carefully about software upgrades.

I think good engineering is having what works for the job without too much fat or limiting factors.

cyrano Sat, 02/09/2019 - 05:10

kmetal, post: 460401, member: 37533 wrote: I think the latest bt version maxes out at 2 devices, i could be wrong. Ive had reasonable luck with those little BT to stereo (trs) receivers into and out of a scarlett, i cant say id trust it for anything critical.

The first question, for me, still is "which BT thingies can do telephone and stereo sound?". Not at the same time.

The next thing is I think I need to add more than one BT receiver to capture two phones. One phone, I've got working. Two doesn't want to do it. I can pair multiple devices, but I can't seem to make 'm work simultaneously.

There's one pro device that seems better, but it's 300$. So two of those means 600$.

That's out of the question for something I might use once or twice a year.

Excellent point. I went on hiatus 3 years back just as the studio was upgrading to 64 bit os. Ive grown to just assume im going to have to re optomize windows each update. Even installing or updating software has screwed w my settings before.

Im trying something with this new rig, where i keep one computer seperate and install all.my software on it, and test updates ect before it goes into the main system as needed.

I've done it like that for years. With G5 desktop. No security problems, as it's PPC code. But these days, I'm so used to one laptop for everything, that I need to install updates. No problems with older machines. The newest ones, with the T2 chip, seem to have all kinds of troubles. Not all of them, that's the weirdest part.

I recently installed a top MB Pro with a bunch of RME interfaces. To be absolutely redundant, they bought two identical MB Pro's. One of them worked as it should. The other one showed dropouts in recordings and even had dropouts on internal audio. Apple tried to blame it on RME, until I could show them dropouts from iTunes on internal audio. Then they agreed to exchange the machine. The newer one didn't have that problem...

At some point i hope audio engineers can work with dedicated audio machines more like the old hard disk recorders, or standalone recorders.

I was thinking about the Cymatic 24. Cheap, seems reliable. But I contemplated too long. Production has ended.

No worries tho. We've got two X32's for the bigger live setups. I can use these to record, over USB, AES50 or even Dante.

Fingers crossed for ya. I think one of my former co workers has some live aerosmith reel to reels laying around somewhere from the early 80s.

Fingers crossed. Thanks!

Still no answer from management. It's saturday. Last night, his phone was off. Don't think they even want to consider the question. Let's see what the artist thinks tomorrow...

Considering how much iphone footage/audio makes it to the web, youd think artists/management would welcome more legitly tracked stuff from FOH.

I've worked as IT manager for a big marketing operation. You'd be amazed at the kind of idiots in that industry.

I used to translate/correct outgoing reports for marketing executives. One day, one slipped through with really fundamental errors. Annoyed, I called my boss. He told me not to worry, stating that nobody read these thousands of euro's reports anyways. He was right.

Great workflow, good sound, tho not the most relaible with age. We had three of them. I suspect humidity also played a roll.

Someone with your experience level would probably have no issue with their issues. The psu is a 366mhz pc basically. My boss was pretty hands off and i lack true expertise in the hardware repair/building, which im learning slowly.

I've had a Tascam SX1 dumped on me recently. Nothing was broken. Took it apart, cleaned connectors, changed a few caps. All boards were working. Yet the machine wouldn't even startup. Different errors at every try. Had to scrap it.

The only thing I couldn't fix, was the fader board. It was literally drowned in different kinds of contact cleaner. Even an ultrasonic bath wouldn't get that out.

Super fun and easy board to work with when its running well. Around here their uber cheap.

I've had a few of these in for repair. When they're over ten years old, it's fingers crossed every time.

I've also bought a new Zoom R16. Extremely portable, doubles as an interface... Nice thing.

Finally sold it. It's got phantom power on only two channels and only 54 dB of gain on the preamps. And that's not enough for some dynamic and most ribbon mics.

Excellent. Ive actually been planning something very similar to that myself, since my life circumstances have changed a couple years back. I want to give underprivileged artists a basic facility of gear, mentoring, ect.

It's nice doing this pro bono. Takes away the pressure and I can say "NO!" very bluntly if someone goes over the top. Happened recently with a theatre director. He's got a big name in the press. When I found out he reduced the agreed budget for the tailor to 25%, I had to blow off steam. After that, I heard he left his gig in Paris and Amsterdam with techs swearing they'd never work with him again, I knew I was probably right. Some months later, I heard he left those shows with a very big financial hangover too...

Best of luck on your gig!

Thanks.

Awsome! Took me several years and hundreds of dollars to realize that pt7 was just poorly written and my core 2 duo laptop was just fine. I actually threw it out just last summer.

That's the advantage of Reaper. Lean and mean. The mean part is the learning curve. You can't have it both ways. Reaper is extremely configurable, but that means it takes time to learn it.

I always argue that computers can usually always do what they did so its up to the owner to really decide carefully about software upgrades.

I think good engineering is having what works for the job without too much fat or limiting factors.

Since Apple is working hard to annoy me, I figured I might as well be annoyed with the rough edges Linux still provides. At least, I'll have a wealth of software to draw from. Ever since the appstore started, software seems to be drying up on macOS. Most of my network tools have been killed already, so it's only audio that's keeping me here for the moment.

kmetal Sat, 02/09/2019 - 19:27

cyrano, post: 460404, member: 51139 wrote: I recently installed a top MB Pro with a bunch of RME interfaces. To be absolutely redundant, they bought two identical MB Pro's. One of them worked as it should. The other one showed dropouts in recordings and even had dropouts on internal audio. Apple tried to blame it on RME, until I could show them dropouts from iTunes on internal audio. Then they agreed to exchange the machine. The newer one didn't have that problem...

Post Steve Jobs era Apple just seems to lack. By the time i got on the mac bandwagon it was time to jump off. I was too late.

cyrano, post: 460404, member: 51139 wrote: We've got two X32's for the bigger live setups. I can use these to record, over USB, AES50 or even Dante.

Love x32. Basically the d8b of today.

cyrano, post: 460404, member: 51139 wrote: I've worked as IT manager for a big marketing operation. You'd be amazed at the kind of idiots in that industry.

I used to translate/correct outgoing reports for marketing executives. One day, one slipped through with really fundamental errors. Annoyed, I called my boss. He told me not to worry, stating that nobody read these thousands of euro's reports anyways. He was right.

The shit people pull. I work at a club a few years and a certain major artist would book 3 clubs, accept the down payments, and only show to whichever was mosy crowded. Or another specifying a certain amount of cannibas, cigars, 3 new white towels, and a home cooked chicken and mashed potatoes meal. I doubt almost nothing in the music biz anymore.

cyrano, post: 460404, member: 51139 wrote: That's the advantage of Reaper. Lean and mean.

Im a fan of reaper, thats what i endex up using in that laptop. I like how Samitude sounds more than reaper, but i usually have reaper on my machines. Great program.

cyrano, post: 460404, member: 51139 wrote: Since Apple is working hard to annoy me, I figured I might as well be annoyed with the rough edges Linux still provides. At least, I'll have a wealth of software to draw from. Ever since the appstore started, software seems to be drying up on macOS. Most of my network tools have been killed already, so it's only audio that's keeping me here for the moment.

I got angry about them (mis)managing my iphone battery so i havent bought an apple product in about a year. Ill probably get an ipad again since my old one worked pretty well.

It seems they are more focussed on consumer gadgets than the pro creative community they worked so hard for previously.

Kurt Foster, a longtime respected member here had good things to say about Harrison Mixbus. Which means alot since hes an analog fan thru and thru.

Once i get these current projects further along i want to dabble in Linux, it seems like something id like learning and using.

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