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Yup. I need some - under £300 (bout $350 USD) if possible.

At the moment I'm on a stoneage card - Soundblaster PCI64 and i have latency probs all the time in Logic and Cubase (strangely enough its ok in reason)

So, post 'em here, wiv links please! :D

-Andy.

Comments

anonymous Sun, 03/03/2002 - 20:30

It occured to me that i should tell you what im aiming to do.

Ok, let me start by saying, im not a hardware person (not yet) im a soft synth junkie.

Cubase, Logic, Reason are my main apps. along with FM7, Pro 52 and HALion - i wish to sample ambient noises (taps dripping etc..) i assume i will need a mic and a pre-amp. I want a card good enough to record audio and playback soft synths at the same time - with real low latency.

Anthing else is a bonus really.

Doublehelix Mon, 03/04/2002 - 04:53

Hey MM...

I am not a soft synth guy, but my understanding is that the reason they are called "soft synths" is because they are run on the computer CPU and not on a card.

However, you do need a keyboard, and that keyboard needs to have a path to get into the computer, via MIDI (some of the MIDI controller keyboards now can go into your system via the USB port). You talk about an FM7...is this the new soft synth, or do you have a real Yamaha FM7?

We need some more information here about your keyboard(s)....

Your price range obviously limits what you can do, but there are lots of vendors out that can probably fit the bill...

look at Echo's Mia or Gina at:

http://

Also, check out some of the RME Hammerfall Cards:

http://

Good Luck!

anonymous Mon, 03/04/2002 - 17:11

Yes, FM7 is a truly AMAZING soft synth from the gods themselves, Native Instruments - http://www.nativeinstruments.com

I have a midi keyboard. The Evolution 249c - it also has 12 fully assignable knobs so automation isnt to much of a problem for me either.

Im heavily using Reason at the moment - i want to make the move into using Soft Synths with Logic (Not cubase as i prefer Logic) i also want to use Reason with Logic via Rewire.

As i understand it, the soundcard effects the audio quality of the pc and the latency between midi and audio.

I looked at the MIA - but from what i can see it has no Midi input! i dont want to use the usb since the midi port on the soundcard will be faster.

So i was looking at the Audiophile, and its a possibilty.
Taking a look at the Hammerfall website now...

anonymous Wed, 03/06/2002 - 01:45

Tbh ive been buying and borrowing things offa friends and relatives.

I got my keyboard THIS christmas just gone, i wouldve got the soundcard before it, but i really really HATE having to input notes and automation by mouse!

*stabs the mouse*

Yup. Im going for Audiophile since A: in the UK its £158.63 from http://www.jigsaw24.com - they have a cheaper OEM version, but im not sure what OEM means - does it just mean it dont have the bundled sofware? Thats the only difference that i can see between the two.

Thx for ya' replies.

-Andy

knightfly Wed, 03/06/2002 - 08:08

"OEM" stands for Original Equipment Manufacturer - It's intended for system builders. Most stuff that says "OEM" is just the one piece, sometimes in a plain white plastic bag. No software (or crippled SW) no cables, no brackets, NADA. If you're not a techie with a lot of extra loose pieces laying around to fill in, go for the "retail box" version of anything in a computer. The few extra dollars will save you major frustration. (Example: wanna get on the web and download a manual, drivers, and formatting software for a hard drive, then go to the computer store and buy a pair of brackets/rails, an IDE cable, and a bezel? Then buy "OEM".)You were on the right track, only difference is now you know you are, and why... Steve