You say i better skip the Pendulum because it wont improve anything?
If thats the case, how do you get the quality of the Pendulum into a DAW?
No, that's not what I'm saying. You seem to be confused about how signal chains work.
Take a look at the specs of the Saffire. It is essentially a stright-wire-with-gain preamp. It is designed so as to not add to or diminish or otherwise obscure whatever signal you put through it. i.e. if the specs are to be believed the Saffire is sonically transparent. And the same goes for the line inputs and outputs. Whatever you put into the Saffire, that's what will come back out of it.
Saffire PRO 40 Audio Interfaces Professional 20 In / 20 Out Firewire interface with eight Focusrite Pre-amps
This transparency can cut both ways. If you put a noisey, or mid-high or high-end hyped mic you're likely gonna get mid-hyped or brittle result.
That can be good or bad depending on what you are recording and what *sound* you are after. The brittle part is probably not gonna be good.
Likewise, if you have a darker mic you are likely to get a result that reflects that characteristic.
Putting a preamp like the Pendulum ahead of the Saffire is gonna give it different "flavors" than running straight into the Saffire by virtue of the EQ capabilities of the SPS-1. It looks like the amp portion is meant to be a stright-wire-with-gain design too, but with parametric EQ so you can shape the final signal.
But that doesn't affect the *quality* of what the Saffire is doing. The fidelity of the Saffire stays the same regardless of the input source.
Because the Saffire is essentially transparent, proper mic technique and a good sounding room are going to play a major factor in the outcome of the recordings you do with it.
What is it about the Saffire that you find lacking?