P
PrettyMonster
New member
I've been doing a lot of research online and I think I'm more confused NOW than I was when I started. Please forgive the ranting.
Seems like every pro audio company has a plethora of ways to get a signal from mics/instruments/mixers/etc into a computer for recording. And it seems that you can choose from a number of different formats (usb, firewire, adat, spif, etc), sample rates (44.1, 48, 96, 192???) and bit depths (16, 18, 20, 24). Some have PCI cards and some don't. This is already confusing enough for a newbie but does not even get into all of the different arrays of ins, outs, these, those, that and the others.
And of course the price difference between two pieces of equipment that *seem* to do basically the same thing can be jaw-dropping.
Every company wants you to think that their product is the best, or at least the best in its price range, so you can't really trust them on their word. But if you ask 10 people on this forum (or any other for that matter) for their opinion on a piece of equipment you'll get 7 or 8 COMPLETELY different answers/opinions running the gammet from the highest praise to death threats against the manufacturer.
Then of course you get the guys who suggest that everyone should go out and get this or that piece of equipment because its a bargain at only $8000 (this is HOMErecording.com, right?) and without it your recordings will be garbage.
So with all of this said, how is anyone ever supposed to figure out what to get without making a lot of really expensive mistakes?
For instance I'm looking for something that will convert 8 channels of analog into 8 channels of digital. I've found probably two dozen interfaces that could accomplish this task and there are probably another two dozen more out there that I haven't even heard of.
I already have a mixer so I don't *think* I need preamps or phantom power or headphone jacks or XLR I/Os but maybe I do.
I need help.
Seems like every pro audio company has a plethora of ways to get a signal from mics/instruments/mixers/etc into a computer for recording. And it seems that you can choose from a number of different formats (usb, firewire, adat, spif, etc), sample rates (44.1, 48, 96, 192???) and bit depths (16, 18, 20, 24). Some have PCI cards and some don't. This is already confusing enough for a newbie but does not even get into all of the different arrays of ins, outs, these, those, that and the others.
And of course the price difference between two pieces of equipment that *seem* to do basically the same thing can be jaw-dropping.
Every company wants you to think that their product is the best, or at least the best in its price range, so you can't really trust them on their word. But if you ask 10 people on this forum (or any other for that matter) for their opinion on a piece of equipment you'll get 7 or 8 COMPLETELY different answers/opinions running the gammet from the highest praise to death threats against the manufacturer.
Then of course you get the guys who suggest that everyone should go out and get this or that piece of equipment because its a bargain at only $8000 (this is HOMErecording.com, right?) and without it your recordings will be garbage.
So with all of this said, how is anyone ever supposed to figure out what to get without making a lot of really expensive mistakes?
For instance I'm looking for something that will convert 8 channels of analog into 8 channels of digital. I've found probably two dozen interfaces that could accomplish this task and there are probably another two dozen more out there that I haven't even heard of.
I already have a mixer so I don't *think* I need preamps or phantom power or headphone jacks or XLR I/Os but maybe I do.
I need help.

