Steve House
August 3rd, 2005, 11:20 PM
Getting close to a new audio interface purchase for editing computer. Would like user comments and feedback on which of the following PC interfaces might be best for audio for video editing and mixing.
Notes on the context: Will be doing limited live recording at present and when I do an external mixer with preamps will be added for input so having on-card mic preamps is not a factor one way or the other. May however be recording analog or digital audio to capture from location sound recorded double system or production music recordings etc. Want to be able to edit, mix and sweeten music, SFX, dialog, general sound design etc properly. Mixing to stereo and 5.1, delivery mostly on DV, DVD, and probably some VHS. Audio software under consideration includes Audition, Acid, Soundforge, Audacity, Vegas, and/or Nuendo (have seen some recent discussion about Traktion that sounds interesting for recording so will be looking at it as well) - am really starting to like the looks of Nuendo but holding off on final software decisions until I've had chance for a bit more hands on with them so this post is hardware rather than software related. Using a Contour shuttle at the moment and planning on a Mackie Control for the user interface as soon as the budget permits. Analog video I/O and capture of digital video sources probably with a Canopus AVC110, 300, or ACEDVio and of course also direct Firewire from the camera. So when it comes down to the soundcard to go with all this ...
Considering only PCI card interfaces for the moment and narrowing it down to the following options, what are people's reactions to and opinions one way or the other on ...
Delta 1010
Echo Layala
MOTU 2408
Emu 1820m
and just to be fair
SB Audigy 4 Pro
SB Audigy 2 ZX
Guess I'm trying to say I want to set up a class "A" audio-for-video mixing and editing suite but not a music recording or MIDI composing studio. If you could take your pick for a Windows-based DAW with very limited live studio recording but strong multi-channel mixing and sound design requirements and using the above mentioned software/hardware, which would you choose and why?
I'm pretty sure I already understand the answer to this one but tossing another question out to the group to make sure I haven't overlooked anything, how does the number of channels in the sound card effect the number of tracks one can work with in the editor at any one time, or does it? As far as recording from the inputs, it's obvious that if the card has 8 input channels, there can only be a max of 8 separate tracks being recorded at once but on the output side, if there are 8 output channels does that mean you can mix an unlimited number of tracks into a maximum of up to 8 output streams or does it mean you only work mixing 8 tracks on the timeline at a time? Again, obviously if you use some hardware signal processing during the mix - external hardware compressors and equalizers for example - each one you use will require a pair of I/O ports for its sends and returns but for the moment lets say all processing will be done strictly in software. In that case does the number of output channels on the card only affect monitoring and final analog I/O or does it also limit the number of tracks that can be worked with any one time in the editing software? If we were working with an unspecified number of multiple files that were already on the computer in WAV format, mixing them down into multiple tracks and ultimately rendering the mix back to saved WAV format or AC3 files on the PC with no external hardware processing or analog output required, and were willing to work deaf with regard to monitoring, would we even need an audio interface in the system at all or could we do it all with software on an otherwise basic PC?
Notes on the context: Will be doing limited live recording at present and when I do an external mixer with preamps will be added for input so having on-card mic preamps is not a factor one way or the other. May however be recording analog or digital audio to capture from location sound recorded double system or production music recordings etc. Want to be able to edit, mix and sweeten music, SFX, dialog, general sound design etc properly. Mixing to stereo and 5.1, delivery mostly on DV, DVD, and probably some VHS. Audio software under consideration includes Audition, Acid, Soundforge, Audacity, Vegas, and/or Nuendo (have seen some recent discussion about Traktion that sounds interesting for recording so will be looking at it as well) - am really starting to like the looks of Nuendo but holding off on final software decisions until I've had chance for a bit more hands on with them so this post is hardware rather than software related. Using a Contour shuttle at the moment and planning on a Mackie Control for the user interface as soon as the budget permits. Analog video I/O and capture of digital video sources probably with a Canopus AVC110, 300, or ACEDVio and of course also direct Firewire from the camera. So when it comes down to the soundcard to go with all this ...
Considering only PCI card interfaces for the moment and narrowing it down to the following options, what are people's reactions to and opinions one way or the other on ...
Delta 1010
Echo Layala
MOTU 2408
Emu 1820m
and just to be fair
SB Audigy 4 Pro
SB Audigy 2 ZX
Guess I'm trying to say I want to set up a class "A" audio-for-video mixing and editing suite but not a music recording or MIDI composing studio. If you could take your pick for a Windows-based DAW with very limited live studio recording but strong multi-channel mixing and sound design requirements and using the above mentioned software/hardware, which would you choose and why?
I'm pretty sure I already understand the answer to this one but tossing another question out to the group to make sure I haven't overlooked anything, how does the number of channels in the sound card effect the number of tracks one can work with in the editor at any one time, or does it? As far as recording from the inputs, it's obvious that if the card has 8 input channels, there can only be a max of 8 separate tracks being recorded at once but on the output side, if there are 8 output channels does that mean you can mix an unlimited number of tracks into a maximum of up to 8 output streams or does it mean you only work mixing 8 tracks on the timeline at a time? Again, obviously if you use some hardware signal processing during the mix - external hardware compressors and equalizers for example - each one you use will require a pair of I/O ports for its sends and returns but for the moment lets say all processing will be done strictly in software. In that case does the number of output channels on the card only affect monitoring and final analog I/O or does it also limit the number of tracks that can be worked with any one time in the editing software? If we were working with an unspecified number of multiple files that were already on the computer in WAV format, mixing them down into multiple tracks and ultimately rendering the mix back to saved WAV format or AC3 files on the PC with no external hardware processing or analog output required, and were willing to work deaf with regard to monitoring, would we even need an audio interface in the system at all or could we do it all with software on an otherwise basic PC?