Thanks all
I was just looking through SOS reader adds - seems I can get a MOTU Core PCI and a Mackie 32.8 for about 1500UKP total second hand which aint bad
All starting to sound very tempting - and its the first console Ive come across that actually supports the kind of recording/mixing/mastering/patching/monitoring setups and workflow that I want to use.
What are the main headaches of buying larger consoles? I was thinking of taking an iPod (not ideal, but better than nothing...), cans and my KP3 and some cables just to run through all the channels for noisey wipers and anything else that might be amiss.
I guess as allways a good sign - does the guy have patch bays - yes means he probably wasnt plugging cacle into the connectors 50 times a day, does he have a dust cover - less chance of wipers getting degraded, does the place smell of smoke - def no no.
Ages ago I was looking at getting one of the RME PCI cards and then hitching a loads of non-RME ADAT DA/AD boxes to it. Kind of gone off that idea now and some of the tracking done here would *possibly* benefit from higher sample rates at tracking time - vocals, accoustic instruments etc, so thats put me off the ADAT boxes thought, and hence the thought about getting a MOTU core system (PCI or PCI-E).
RME is appealing just becuase of their claim of ultra low latency, and ultra low CPU, but I wonder whats the reality of this actually is, along with driver reliability on a decent PC. Actually drivers are my number one worry - I allmost cant remember that last time I bought something that did audio in the pro-audio space for the computer whos drivers just worked and were problem free from that point onwards. This is a large part of why Im throwing in the towel with the yamaha rig.
Maybe Im getting too cynical, but Im just tired of spending time troubleshooting one thing after another and a computer running everything just seems so sensitive by the time you have a complex rig. Thats the reason Ive been thinking of bypassing the computer completely, or at least having the option to. These days I just want to play, record, mix etc, not be trouleshooting driver issues and loosing ideas in the process...
That and finding that even cheap analog hardware still is quicker and easier to use and oddly can work out alot cheaper than plugins that approach it in having a pleasing sound. And no plugin yet I have used comes close to the little collection of digital TC electronic and analog SPL hardware boxes I have. Of course cables allways pile up the cost...
For some time Ive been thinking the prices of pluggins is creeping up rather excessively - then I saw it - a TECH21 plugin for pro-tools that cost *MORE* than the original analog hardware upon which it was modelled costs new...