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Recycling old interfaces.

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Submitted by kmetal on Fri, 07/10/2015 - 06:43

hey all,
I am reorienting my life, lol, and I realized that I have no computer, (haven't for a a couple years since I got a tablet) and I have a M-Audio FW1814 interface. Just wondering if there is anything useful too keep it around for, or just throw it in the trash.

I will get a new computer and interface as my situation allows, but it will all be new and up to date for the time. Didn't know if there was any good reason to keep it? It works fine and is immaculate, I just don't know if it can 'do anything' useful.

Jw what you guys think.

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kmetal

Thanks. So for instance if the internal routing allows, I could use the interface with no connection to a computer, but piped into the adat of say (Apollo twin), and send my tape machine thru them? Basically using the interface as a standalone converter? (Not that it's ideal for this, but just for my understanding).

D- you got first dibs on it, I'll let you know first before I chuck it. The only reason I had it was to get into protools cheaply.

Fri, 07/10/2015 - 10:48 Permalink
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Boswell

Kurt Foster, post: 430526, member: 7836 wrote: the point of interest here is if you use lightpipe to connect it, the clock of the receiving interface will provide the clocking. so even a cheapo converter will sound better clocked by a better box. how much better is anyones guess ....

To do this you would need to use a lightpipe in each direction, even if no signal data were sent to the 1814. Whether the clock recovered from the ADAT input had less jitter than the 1814's internal clock is anyone's guess, but at least it would mean that you did not have to clock your new interface from its incoming ADAT stream.

Sat, 07/11/2015 - 05:40 Permalink
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MrEase

Kurt Foster, post: 430526, member: 7836 wrote: the point of interest here is if you use lightpipe to connect it, the clock of the receiving interface will provide the clocking. so even a cheapo converter will sound better clocked by a better box. how much better is anyones guess ....

I know it's some time since I contributed to the thread "What is clock jitter?" but I did so in the (forlorn?) hope of dispelling this kind of blanket statement. There is absolutely no guarantee that a remotely clocked interface will improve that interfaces sound. As I wrote at the time, the stand alone clock jitter is likely to be better, whatever the quality of the remote clock, as the "cheapo" interface's own clock recovery circuits cannot be eliminated by using external source.

Even when that is said, your statement makes the assumption that clock jitter is the only impediment to the sound quality of the "cheapo" interface, ergo your assumption that an (unspecified) improvement must be had. This may or may not be true (as Boswell suggested) but it is certainly not correct to make such a universal assertion.

Mon, 07/13/2015 - 10:18 Permalink