Which is a good soundcard for producing? .. and where can I get them?
I heard audiophile or gina was good? is there a model for it? any other good recommendation .. coz im trying to look for one with an audio interface that maybe allows me to easily switch inputs for recording of different synths and devices..
im looking for professional ones for producing and studio working
Last edited by gareth on Nov-28-2002 at 13:52
Nov-28-2002 13:17
hey cheggy
like a tiger
Registered: Aug 2002
Location: Sydney, Australia
the audiophiles are made by M-Audio. These people make supurb sound cards. The audiophile is a good one, although from memory it has only one channel for audio in and out (stereo) and midi. I may be wrong with this.
If you want multiple channels, go for something like the M-Audio Delta 4/4 (four channels) or the delta 6/6 (six channels). I'm not sure if they have midi, but you can always just get a midi interface.
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Nov-28-2002 13:59
gareth
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Jan 2001
Location: Toronto
so is this designed for producing or studio work?
like good sound quality and can handle huge amount of processing since it will involve a lot of WAVS
Nov-28-2002 20:02
SAGE2635
Suspended User
Registered: Nov 2001
Location: UWSAstudioCambridge
I have the M-Audio Delta 66 soundcard. A reasonably priced but a very good card. You can pick one up at any Long&McQuades or SavedbyTechnology in Toronto.
Nov-29-2002 02:26
gareth
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Jan 2001
Location: Toronto
Where are these places located?
So what sequencer do u use ur m-audio with? can it support huge amount of wav processing? coz now i use stupid creative.. in logic i keep havin the error of system overload and sound engine cant handle all the amount of data on time or something!
so i wanna get a professional card.. coz when tehe rror comes up durin my working it really loses my creativity and mood!
so u think this card will do good ?
Nov-29-2002 10:35
Michael Russo
mmm mmm prog
Registered: Mar 2002
Location: Toronto, Canada
SAGE, would you happen to know how much long & mcquade wants for a delta44?
Gareth... a new soundcard won't fix your problem (unless its a latency issue? I'm not familiar with logic)... spend the money on a new pc
Nov-29-2002 12:45
gareth
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Jan 2001
Location: Toronto
my pc is 1.8ghz 654mb ram
i think its alrite?
Nov-29-2002 17:59
SAGE2635
Suspended User
Registered: Nov 2001
Location: UWSAstudioCambridge
Michael the delta44 cost around $364 and the delta66 $490.
Gareth Micheal is right about getting a good PC. A good soundcard will only provide you with good quality recording with your synth/sequencer and zero latency monitoring etc. however, you may have the best soundcard but with a PC thats not powerful enough, you can't expect it to run Logic with ease
Downtown to Yonge & Wellesley. Go south down first laneway running south from Wellesley just west of Yonge. You will find Saved by Technology in the
orange/brown building which some may describe as "salmon" colored.
If you don't want to risk a ticket, public parking is available at an adjacent lot.
Directions from Subway:
From Wellesley Station, walk west through Yonge & Wellesley intersection then south down first laneway (west of Yonge) to the "salmon" building seen above.
Nov-29-2002 21:07
DJ Chrono
HTML is not allowed.
Registered: Jan 2002
Location: toronto
i have the delta 44 and I highly recommend it. great sound quality at a half decent price.
Nov-30-2002 01:29
gareth
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Jan 2001
Location: Toronto
woah what car is that?
Nov-30-2002 04:25
phasedout
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Apr 2001
Location: Santa Barbara, CA
it looks like a tiburon
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Dec-01-2002 06:03
Anheuser
tranceaddict
Registered: Aug 2000
Location:
I not an expert on the subject but I recently started running Reason and Cubase rewired. Until I replaced my Sblive with the Audiophile, Reason and Cubase rewired was not very pleasant to work in. It overloaded my system (P4 1.5 256 RAM) and tracks would not play out very smoothly. A more pro sound card, like the M-audio ones, will take a lot of the load off your CPU and allow things to run more smoothly. I think it's comparable to upgrading your video card to get smoother video game performance. If I'm wrong, then I'd love for someone to explain why my system overload problems went away when I upgraded to the audiophile.
You said you use a lot of wavs in your production. Does that mean you're making sample based tracks or does that mean you're multitracking long wav files? From what I've heard, multitracking is largely dependent on hard drive speed (assuming you're using few effects on the wavs). I don't believe a better sound card would improve system performance if all you're doing is multitracking without a lot of effects.