funkinlesson
Joined: 14/05/12
Posts: 12
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Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
#987405 - 14/05/12 08:02 PM
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Hi,
I'm looking for an internal sound card to use for recording. I'm a DJ and I
record mixes, some of which are multitracked, and I also record scratching on hip-hop
tracks. My PC is pretty high spec as it's a new Ivy Bridge build and it's running Windows
7 Professional 64 bit.
My requirements are good sound quality, zero latency (or
as close to as possible) when monitoring the line in input and as low latency as possible
while recording. My max budget is £150, although there may be some flexibility there.
Oh yeah - The reason why I would rather go internal is because I like to just plug
the output of my mixer into the line in socket of my PC and then just forget about it, so
I don't really want an external USB device.
Many thanks!
Steve.
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Martin Walker
Watcher Of The Skies
Joined: 28/02/01
Posts: 16387
Loc: Cornwall, UK
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987455 - 15/05/12 12:53 AM
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Hi Steve, and welcome to the SOS Forums!  I'd recommend an RME DSPe AIO for the ultimate in low latency and audio quality in PCIe
format, but I'm afraid you're not going to get really low latency for a budget of
£150. Perhaps you need to reconsider how low your latency really needs to go.
Anyone listening to their vocals in 'real time' will have headphones on, and
therefore have the sounds 'inside their head', and a latency of even 3ms can be
disconcerting in these conditions. Most drummers prefer to work with latencies of 6ms or
under, which should provide an 'immediate' response, as should most keyboard players
(after all, even on acoustic pianos there's a delay between your hitting a key and the
corresponding hammer hitting the string), while electric guitarists can probably cope with
a 12ms latency if they are used to playing away from their stack. What are YOU
aiming for? Martin
-------------------- YewTreeMagic
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Tombot
Joined: 09/12/04
Posts: 63
Loc: Scan Pro Audio
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987472 - 15/05/12 07:09 AM
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At this budget, you need to stop using software monitoring and go for a device with either
hardware monitoring controls or a monitor mixer control panel, you wont be able to put fx
on your inputs, but as a dj, that shouldnt be a requirement.
The emu 0404
pcie has a monitor mixer, however the patchmix software is pretty un-user friendly to set
up.
The M-Audio Audiphile 192 ( go for ths over the 2496, much better
converters) also has direct monitoring if you have a pci slot.
personally,
i'd go for a Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 if you havent got a pci slot, it might be USB, but
much easier to handle than the emu.
-------------------- www.theautobots.com / www.scan.co.uk
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TheChorltonWheelie
Joined: 22/09/09
Posts: 867
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987477 - 15/05/12 07:34 AM
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Quote funkinlesson:
My
requirements are good sound quality, zero latency (or as close to as possible) when
monitoring the line in input and as low latency as possible while recording. My max budget
is £150, although there may be some flexibility there.
+1 to what Martin has said.
However, you'll get a secondhand 9632 RME for around that budget, possibly even a
Multiface Mk1 if you're lucky, and the latter will allow you to monitor with zero latency.
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funkinlesson
Joined: 14/05/12
Posts: 12
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987589 - 15/05/12 02:45 PM
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Thanks for the replies.
The main thing is that when I'm monitoring the input,
there is no perceivable latency. I don't have an exact figure for what I'm looking for,
but there can't be any noticeable delay. If there is a bit of latency when recording, at
least I can compensate for that in Audition.
One of the reasons I'm switching
from on board sound (aside from general audio quality) is because of interference. When I
crank my speakers up high with no audio playing, I can hear both a kind of ticking noise
and a weird sort of high frequency tone that fluctuates in pitch. Any idea what's causing
that? I bought an Asus Essence STX sound card and fitted it, and with the speakers cranked
up there was absolute silence - perfect - the sound quality was great too considering the
price of the card, except when monitoring the line in input the latency was awful, so I've
had to return the card for a refund.
My last 2 PCs had on board sound. I had
no issues with latency at all. I've just built a new PC that also has on board sound
(Realtek) and again, no issues with latency whatsoever although I am having interference
issues as mentioned in the previous paragraph. So why is it that when I try and install a
mid-range sound card, I get latency issues? I'd have thought that the performance would
have at least matched the cheap on board sound in that respect.
Edited by funkinlesson (15/05/12 02:46 PM)
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robinv
Joined: 31/08/04
Posts: 615
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987607 - 15/05/12 03:57 PM
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Quote funkinlesson:
My last
2 PCs had on board sound. I had no issues with latency at all. I've just built a new PC
that also has on board sound (Realtek) and again, no issues with latency whatsoever
although I am having interference issues as mentioned in the previous paragraph. So why is
it that when I try and install a mid-range sound card, I get latency issues? I'd have
thought that the performance would have at least matched the cheap on board sound in that
respect.
I think, perhaps,
we're all talking about different things. If onboard sound appears to have no latency to
you then certainly posher audio interfaces won't either - ie you press play and it plays,
you record and it's in sync with other tracks - so i'd say don't worry about it. If
interference is a problem then consider going for an external USB box, also make
absolutely sure you're not suffering from earth loops.
-------------------- PC-Music.com hints, tips & reviews
Rain Computers UK - Creative Audio PC's
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funkinlesson
Joined: 14/05/12
Posts: 12
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: robinv]
#987611 - 15/05/12 04:33 PM
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Thanks for the reply, robinv. Regarding this: -
Quote:
If onboard sound appears to have no latency to you
then certainly posher audio interfaces won't either
That really hasn't been my experience....
I installed an
Asus Essence STX card yesterday and hooked an output of my DJ mixer up to the line in
input on the card. To monitor the sound I had 2 options - either go into Asus's audio
control panel and hit the "monitor" button underneath the line in volume slider, or via
the control panel in Windows I could select the input, go to the Listen tab and place a
check mark next to "Listen to this device". In both cases, there was a hugely noticeable
amount of delay in between what I was doing on my turntables and what was coming out of
the speakers. I also tried uninstalling Asus's drivers and installing third party unified
drivers, both with and without the low latency option checked on install, but this made
little difference and the latency while monitoring the input was still so bad that it was
unusable for my particular needs.
With the on board sound, I plug my DJ mixer
into the line in and I can hear the sound. I don't need to go into any control panel and
enable "Listen to this device" or whatever - it just works - and there is no delay between
what I'm doing on my turntables and what comes out of the speakers.
So that
is the crucial difference. It may be an issue with the Asus card in particular, as there
are a number of posts on Asus's forums from people with the same issue, but there is no
response from anyone from Asus (or anyone at all in fact) with a solution.
Here is a review of the card I found on Amazon.com: -
Quote:
I bought this card a
week ago and initially loved it because the detail in sound playback was excellent. Then I
tried to use it to record live audio through the line input and there is a totally
unacceptable latency issue. You hear the sound about a half second after you play
something. I have NEVER had a audio card do that (not even onboard audio). I called tech
support and they were completely useless.
At the ASUS website this is part of the
specifications listed: "ASIO 2.0 Driver Support:
Supports 44.1K/48K/96K/192KHz
@16/24bit with very low latency"
Very low latency, NOT!!!!!!!!!!
If you do any
recording of live audio, DO NOT BUY THIS CARD!
Edited by funkinlesson (15/05/12 04:34 PM)
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Hugh Robjohns
SOS Technical Editor
Joined: 25/07/03
Posts: 18383
Loc: Worcestershire
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987612 - 15/05/12 04:42 PM
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You may need to configure the sound card driver to achieve an acceptable latency by
adjusting hte number of buffers. There's usually a slider or data entry box to do this. In
general, higher buffers are used during replay to allow more processor power to be devoted
to handling tracks and signal processing, whereas fewer buffers are used during recording
to reduce latency.
I'd second the nomination of the RMS AIO card -- I use one
myself and find it excellent.
Hugh
-------------------- Technical Editor, Sound On Sound
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robinv
Joined: 31/08/04
Posts: 615
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987636 - 15/05/12 07:20 PM
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Quote funkinlesson:
That
really hasn't been my experience....
Aha, well thanks for sharing - i think we might be getting to the bottom of
things. With normal regular Windows drivers you will get a delay of about 500ms -
that's half a second. With more up-to-date WDM Windows drivers that's more like 50-100ms
which is still very noticable, but it varies. Latency only applies to audio signals routed
through the software and back out again - it's the conversion, processing and reconversion
that needs the processing buffer. What it sounds like to me is that the Asus card you
tried is routing everything through the software and so you encounter a delay. Your
on-board sound is probably routing the input directly out again bypassing the software and
so not experiencing any latency - this is what we call "direct monitoring". When it talks
about "ASIO" drivers for the Asus this is only applicable in a piece of software that
supports ASIO drivers, like Cubase or Ableton Live - Windows ignores these drivers
completely which is why they are not helping.
So, if you install any audio
interface and monitor through Windows you will probably encounter some latency as they are
all using WDM Windows drivers. It's only in Cubase (etc) running the ASIO drivers will you
get very low latency (5-10ms). However, it sounds like what you need is to monitor
directly, not going through the software, so that you can have essentially zero latency -
you need a card with "Direct Monitoring" - most decent, made-for-audio soundcards and
interfaces will have this.
I'd still recommend an external box. If you are
DJ-ing then i'd recommend checking out the Native Instruments Traktor Audio 6 http://www.native-instruments.com/#/en/products/dj/traktor-audio-6/ or
if you are recording other sources like mic/guitar then the Komplete Audio 6 would also be
worth a look.
I hope that helps
-------------------- PC-Music.com hints, tips & reviews
Rain Computers UK - Creative Audio PC's
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funkinlesson
Joined: 14/05/12
Posts: 12
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: robinv]
#987644 - 15/05/12 07:40 PM
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Quote robinv:
Your on-board sound
is probably routing the input directly out again bypassing the software and so not
experiencing any latency - this is what we call "direct monitoring".
Right, that makes sense. The Asus card would have
been superb for the price had it not suffered with latency when monitoring the line in
input, and I've since found several posts on different forums from people who have
returned the card for the same reason as me - great for playback, awful for live
recording.
Are there some discrete sound cards that do direct monitoring? Why
would any of them not do this, as it only introduces latency?
Quote Hugh Robjohns:
I'd second
the nomination of the RMS AIO card -- I use one myself and find it excellent.
Do you mean the RME DSPe AIO card that
Martin suggested above? Unfortunately, that's nearly triple my maximum budget here in the
UK.
As for the external USB route, several people have suggested this to me,
but I'd be happier with an internal card mainly cos I just want to plug my mixer into the
line in and hook up some powered speakers to the speaker out, so having another box
connected via USB that's outside the machine seems unnecessary. That said, there seem to
be more suitable products that are external and in my price range, but surely there is
something good I can use that's internal and within my price range? I'm not looking for
professional level recording. I'm just a hobbyist looking for a way to record mixes with
minimal latency when monitoring the line in input.
Thanks a lot for the
replies gents.
Edited by funkinlesson (15/05/12 07:40 PM)
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Pete Kaine
Scan Computers
Joined: 10/07/03
Posts: 3156
Loc: Manchester
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987736 - 16/05/12 08:56 AM
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Quote funkinlesson:
great
for playback, awful for live recording.
Yeah, we found that as well. Great convertors and signal path,
sounds awesome in playback for the price... and the ASIO buffers are locked, and no real
time monitoring. It's a great home theater card and little more. I've even had it out with
a number of Asus engineers over beer regarding writing some proper drivers, and they are
all for it but no one seems to be able to convince head office to spend the time on it, so
it's unlikely to ever happen.
Quote Hugh Robjohns:
Do you mean the RME DSPe AIO
card that Martin suggested above? Unfortunately, that's nearly triple my maximum budget
here in the UK.
As for the external USB route, several people have suggested
this to me, but I'd be happier with an internal card mainly cos I just want to plug my
mixer into the line in and hook up some powered speakers to the speaker out, so having
another box connected via USB that's outside the machine seems unnecessary. That said,
there seem to be more suitable products that are external and in my price range, but
surely there is something good I can use that's internal and within my price range?
The's a few bits but we've found
the NI drivers to be rock solid and great performers. Development of internal cards has
fallen by the wayside the last few years as everyone rushes to maximise sales by being to
sell the same interface to every type of user, be they PC or Mac, Desktop or Laptop so
external interfaces have become far more common these days.
The NI KA6 that
Robin mentioned above is the unit I'd go for under £200 for this sort of application with
the Traktor Audio 6 (the dj edition) being the more suitable and cheaper choice of the two
models coming in at about £170.
-------------------- ScanProAudio & 3XS Audio Systems
ScanProAudio Blog
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funkinlesson
Joined: 14/05/12
Posts: 12
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: Pete Kaine]
#987779 - 16/05/12 11:26 AM
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Cheers, Pete.
I've ordered an E-MU 0404 to try, but if that's no good then I'm
pretty much out of options for PCIe (my MOBO has no regular PCI slots) cards that have
direct monitoring and are within my budget.
Would you recommend still getting a
good internal card for playback, but using a USB option for recording? I'm a bit confused
on how USB cards work to be honest, as I've never owned one. Do they do playback as
well?
Thanks.
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Pete Kaine
Scan Computers
Joined: 10/07/03
Posts: 3156
Loc: Manchester
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987787 - 16/05/12 12:04 PM
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Nope, a single external or internal interface is all you need as either solution should do
recording and playback (the are a few exceptions the NI KA2 being an example that only
does playback)and as such you'd only choose to run one interface no matter where it's
located. The Emu's suffered by a rather sizable delay in getting win7 drivers sorted, and
whilst they've got them now performance is very much in the middle of the pack. That said I imagine perfectly acceptable for your requirements, so should see you fine
so just wait for it now you've ordered it and see how you get on with it when it lands.
-------------------- ScanProAudio & 3XS Audio Systems
ScanProAudio Blog
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funkinlesson
Joined: 14/05/12
Posts: 12
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: Pete Kaine]
#987790 - 16/05/12 12:21 PM
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Thanks!
Last questions then.....
Is the Traktor Audio 2 worth
considering?
If I was to go for the Traktor Audio 6 I may as well get the A6
package that comes with the external sound card, control vinyl and everything, so I could
switch to using Traktor instead of Serato. I could then sell Serato to partly fund it.
Sounds like a plan?
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Persian Bit
Joined: 02/03/12
Posts: 74
Loc: Tehran \ IRAN
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987802 - 16/05/12 01:17 PM
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I've got a E-MU 0404|USB interface for daily use when i'm around and not in studio. as an
interface at such low price [comparing to other stuff in its range] i think the sound
quality and options are quiet good. Of course when i compare it with the quality of
M-Audio Audiophile 2496, it stays lower. but generally it's ok since it gives you
everything you need in a compact external box.
It records up to 192k\24-bit and
on a 2.8 GHZ CPU laptop, it gives me up to 2mls of latency which is more than enough for
what i do with it. there's a direct monitoring option too so you don't have any problem
working at slower latencies if your machine is not fast enough. the rest of standard
options are also there [SPDIF in\outs\phantom power on Hi-Z mic ins\...]. I've recorded
audio, produced music in Reason and alikes and mixed with it and haven't had any problem
yet. I even used it in several gigs to play backing sequencer tracks and everytime
everything went so smooth and stable. In all of these occasions, the machine i was working
with wasn't anything special. usuall 2.x ghz machines with 4g of ram.
Previously i had always been in doubt about using USB interfaces because of experienced
USB horrible problems and stuff. but with this one and its USB v2, it's been stable and
very fast.
the only thing i don't like about it is its 2 input \ 2 output
layout. it would be cool to have 6 or 8 inputs so i could even record drum kits in
different places. and i wish it could work without its power supply, relying on USB power.
that would make it a completely mobile setup.
and aha.. its converters and
input mic pre amps are so-so. converters are more ok, but i feel its preamps sound a bit
hard and woody.
of course, we're not talking about a professional, top of the
range interface. but it's ok in its size and range and options and PRICE :-)
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ef37a
Joined: 29/05/06
Posts: 5626
Loc: northampton uk
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987820 - 16/05/12 02:57 PM
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You might find an ESI ESP 1010e cheap.
Worth a dabble?
Dave.
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Balok63
Joined: 17/05/12
Posts: 1
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987936 - 17/05/12 08:13 AM
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Maybe one of the participants in this forum can help me. I use Sibelius (a music notation
program) and don't do any live recording (although I do plan someday to digitize my vinyl
LPs, which means that I do need a sound card with at least one decent input).
According to the nominal specs, an ASUS Xonar Essence would give me all of the
performance that I would need. According to the makers of Sibelius, however, the ASUS
Xonar cards cause the program to crash because the ASIO drivers of the Xonar cards do not
work. Not that I don't believe them, but they do have an interest in the matter, given
that the company that owns Sibelius also owns M-Audio. I have asked about this issue at
the ASUS site and have not received any response. Does anyone know if the ASIO issues
with the ASUS Xonar cards were ever fixed? If not, are there any reasonably priced (I
could go to £250 or thereabouts, I suppose) sound cards that meet my needs and that would
fit into a PCI-e (not PCI) slot?
TIA.
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Pete Kaine
Scan Computers
Joined: 10/07/03
Posts: 3156
Loc: Manchester
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#987942 - 17/05/12 08:41 AM
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Quote funkinlesson:
Is the
Traktor Audio 2 worth considering?
Not in your case, as it's output only with no input options so
wouldn't meet your requirements.
Quote
funkinlesson:
If I was to go for the Traktor Audio 6 I may as well
get the A6 package that comes with the external sound card, control vinyl and everything,
so I could switch to using Traktor instead of Serato. I could then sell Serato to partly
fund it. Sounds like a plan?
It would work, yeah. Depends how attached you are to Serato really!
Quote Balok63:
According
to the nominal specs, an ASUS Xonar Essence would give me all of the performance that I
would need. According to the makers of Sibelius, however, the ASUS Xonar cards cause the
program to crash because the ASIO drivers of the Xonar cards do not work. Not that I
don't believe them, but they do have an interest in the matter, given that the company
that owns Sibelius also owns M-Audio. I have asked about this issue at the ASUS site and
have not received any response. Does anyone know if the ASIO issues with the ASUS Xonar
cards were ever fixed?
Whilst the ASUS range advertises ASIO support, it is very limited in it's functionality
and for realtime recording pretty unusable. We've brought this up with a UK tech manager
who just so happens to run his own studio on the side and understands the requirements of
ASIO, and he filled us in on the fact that the driver/spec team on the audio cards don't
tend to accept suggestions and don't really see the value in working on that side of the
feature set any further.... so we're not expecting to see it improved anytime soon if
ever.
I've never used it with Sibelius but having tried using it with Cubase, I
wouldn't say it's great user experiance and would agree with Avid that it's perhaps not
the best solution.
Quote:
If not, are there any reasonably priced (I could go to £250 or
thereabouts, I suppose) sound cards that meet my needs and that would fit into a PCI-e
(not PCI) slot?
The have been
a number of interfaces mentioned above, so read through the thread and check out the
solutions discussed.
-------------------- ScanProAudio & 3XS Audio Systems
ScanProAudio Blog
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funkinlesson
Joined: 14/05/12
Posts: 12
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Re: Internal PCI-E sound card recommendations for recording?
[Re: funkinlesson]
#988005 - 17/05/12 01:57 PM
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I decided to go for the Traktor Scratch A6 package in the end. It cost me £250 and I have
someone lined up buy my Serato SL1 for £200, so I'm only out £50. Most importantly
(after a bit of tinkering with the audio routing settings), it works absolutely fine, the
sound quality is good, the latency is so low that I don't notice it, and I think that
Traktor Scratch actually performs better than Serato for scratching, which is something I
do a fair bit when DJing, so all in all it's been a decent upgrade.
Thanks
very much to everyone that posted advice!
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