HI
I to would like the same info as I have two cards using adat to two DDX mixes.
Would be nice to use both cards and not spend out on another mobo/card.
It's all running nice at the moment with 64studio
Cheers
Bob
El dl 10 de 05 de 2010 a les 17:32 +0200, en/na Florian Faber va
escriure:
> Pau,Right. But the MADI-to-AES alone (the ADI-6432) costs about 2800€. Far
>
> > the system i need to build should have 8 AES inputs and 24 AES outputs.
> > For that, i see two basic approaches 1) using two RME AES-32 (*) cards
> > in world-clock synch and 2) using a RME hammerfall with 24 ADAT
> > input/outputs and then several 8ch ADAT<->AES converters such as the
> > Aphex 144 (+), which costs about 400€ each 8ch unit.
>
> 3) a MADI interface and any MADI-to-ADAT converter you want
beyond 1) and 2).
Yes AES makes it all over complex but it is a requirement not a
> What are those AES ports needed for anyway? I mean, this are 16 channels
> in and 48 channels out. With that number of channels, using AES just
> becomes a pita. Think of the cabeling alone - or use Tascam-style 25 pin
> DSUB connectors.
decision. It is all about connecting to existing boxes.
Will try that with a couple of hammerfall 9632 we have in the lab before
> > Option 1 seems to me simpler and cheaper but i ignore if is feasible and
> > reliable: Have anyone had good experiences using two clock-synced RME
> > cards with jack?
>
> The driver can start the buffers synchronously, so you have
> sample-synchronous output. To have jack working with multiple cards, you
> can either use alsa magic to combine the cards, or use alsa_out (with
> disabled resampling).
buying the (two) AES-32.
Any recommended documentation or advice?
(Apart from this: http://alsa.opensrc.org/index.php/TwoCardsAsOne)
Thanks
P
_______________________________________________
Linux-audio-dev mailing list
Linux-audio-dev@lists.linuxaudio.org
http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev