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RME Audio Fireface 800
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RME Audio Fireface 800

Interface audio FireWire de la marque RME Audio appartenant à la série Fireface

[RME Fireface 800] La carte firewire de RME !

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Sujet de la discussion [RME Fireface 800] La carte firewire de RME !


Citation : Fireface 800 - RME goes FireWire!

After more than 2 years of development, time has come: RME presents the Fireface 800, a 56 channel 24 bit / 192 kHz high-end, high performance and high speed FireWire audio interface.

The Fireface 800 combines the latest and also proven technologies of previous RME products with the fastest FireWire technology. Analog technology of the ADI-8 converters, microphone technology of QuadMic and OctaMic, TotalMix technology of the Hammerfall DSP series, years of experience in programming of efficient and reliable drivers up to complete support from DIGICheck - only the best of the best, and even a bit more. The Fireface 800 offers the best worked out instrument input that could ever be found in an audio interface, a high power headphone output and signal-to-noise ratios of 119 dBA - typically RME!

RME's world-wide successful Multiface was the basis for the development of the Fireface 800. 8 balanced line I/Os with software controlled switching of the reference levels (-10 dBV, +4 dBu, HiGain), of course realized discretely in the analog domain, guarantee highest dynamic range and highest fidelity. Apart from the levels of the microphone pre-amps and the headphone outputs, all device settings are software controlled. Equipped with the latest A/D and D/A converter chips, all I/Os operate up to 192 kHz and reach even 119 dBA dynamic range on playback.

The front-sided headphone output in high power technology does not only deliver high volume with low-impedance headphones, but represents the playback channels 9/10. In contrast to the Multiface, the headphone output is directly ASIO Direct Monitoring capable.

On the front side, the Fireface 800 has 4 discrete balanced microphone inputs with class-A stage, 48 V phantom powering and separate jack and XLR inputs, which can also be used as additional line inputs. Two of the four mic inputs are permanently available as channels 9 and 10, the other two can be used together with or alternatively to the inputs 7 / 8 on the back.

The FireFace 800's Hi-Z instrument input offers an unprecedented fidelity and flexibility for the use of guitar and bass. A soft-limiter, which has been tuned especially for musical instruments, takes care of an efficient overload protection of the A/D-converter. The limiter does not work without distortion, it deliberately creates harmonic distortion. Due to a soft transition and deliberate creation of harmonics, the input signal is compressed steplessly according to taste, or the limiter can be used as a distortion with tube sound. A 'fuzz' circuit, which can be activated in addition, delivers broad guitar distortion. A filter with several stages, which can also be switched on separately, takes low- and high-frequency disturbances away and guarantees a optimal basic sound even when recording directly into the computer, or when monitoring through a mixing console. Signals from guitar or bass are not being alienated in this case, but pre-conditioned for later processing in the DAW, so that the known amplifier plug-ins can make the most out of the sound.

Two ADAT I/Os allow connecting and inserting effect devices, mixing consoles or external converters. With two additional ADI-8 DS, there are 26 analog inputs and outputs, which remain still 18 at 96 kHz. The SPDIF-I/O works up to 192 kHz, so that there are still 10 analog in- and outputs at the highest sample rate, plus two digital ones.

All inputs and outputs can be used at the same time. E. g., the instrument input can be used either instead of the line input on the back, or together with it. Even the jack and the XLR sockets of the microphone inputs can be used simultaneously. In this way, up to 35 signal sources can be connected to the Fireface 800 and recorded onto 28 separate tracks!

Thanks to the DSP-based TotalMix mixer known from the Hammerfall DSP series, all inputs and outputs can be freely mixed, distributed and routed. Up to 14 completely independent stereo submixes are possible. Thanks to an internal flash memory, all settings including TotalMix are recalled during boot. After making all desired settings, the device works stand-alone even without computer as a submixer, A/D and D/A converter, headphone mixer, format converter, instrument or microphone pre-amplifier, monitoring mixer and much more.

The Fireface 800 is equipped with SteadyClock, RME's latest sync and clock technology. With this, the device becomes a sync reference for the whole studio. SteadyClock refreshes clock signals, removes jitter, and takes permanent care of optimal conversion quality, thus guarantees a sensational sound quality.

Via an insert slot on the back, a time code option (TCO) for synchronizing to LTC, video and VITC can be added. Thanks to SteadyClock, the Fireface 800 does not only extract absolute positions, but also a very clean low-jitter word clock.

The latest FPGAs in 90 nanometer technology with unprecedented power are used in order to offer the FireWire 800 ports besides SteadyClock, ADAT and SPDIF digital PLL, TotalMix and stand-alone mode. On the basis of an integrated 32 bit RISC processor, an interface optimized especially for audio was developed, which is flexible, reconfigurable and one the first Giga-FW interfaces available. And of course it allows operation at latencies down to 48 samples. The Fireface 800 has a second port for hub functionality, bi-lingual mode for full FireWire 400 compatibility, and an additional FW 400 port. Thanks to the multi-ports, several Fireface 800 can be used in parallel and at the same time on one FireWire port without any problem.

Manufacturers suggested retail price: t.b.a. Shipment expected late summer 2004.



source : http://www.rme-audio.com/english/press/index.htm

VIM qui n'a jamais eu son tee-shirt...

Afficher le sujet de la discussion
431
Je rencontre des problèmes pour configurer ma carte avec l'ASIO. je souhaite la faire fonctionner avec Cubase SX, Groove Agent et Wave lab sous Windows XP.
Merci d'avance pour les conseils sur buffer, référence synchro, et block DMA/ position sample, qui me laissent perplexe.
432
Salut !

moi j'avais une petite question. J'ai un disque dur externe en firewire 800, 400, USB2.0. Je l'utilise en 400 (j'ai pas de 800 sur mon pc) et je voulais savoir comment chainer la fireface et le disque dur, dans quel ordre ? Genre RME dans pc en 400, disque dur en 800 dans RME ? Ou si je devais plutot mettre le disque dur en usb meme si j'ai pas vraiment confiance (enfin je sais pas...)

Merci bien !
433
Le mettre sur une autre puce FW, c'est conseillé je ne sais plus où - pour toute carte son FW -
434
Une autre puce = une autre carte FW je suppose ?
435
RME conseille d'utiliser des câbles de mêmes longueurs dans le cas de chainage (doc RME, dispo sur le site)

genre:
PC - RME en firewire 400 de 4m
RME - HDD en firewire 400 de 4m également

je ne sais pas si c'est applicable dans le cas d'un branchement à partir de plusieurs slots Firewire (si dipo sur ta carte controleur)

-----------

Sinon, j'imagine que si tu branches un device Firewire 800 sur la Fireface, elle même branché en 400 sur le PC, le device en question n'utilisera que 400 ?
(idem USB ou encore IDE, non ?)

Sinon, cette carte est géniale, je l'adore :)
436
Du coup je vais pas me prendre la tete je vais acheter ça:
https://www.ldlc.com/fiche/PB00021990.html

ça sera plus simple !

merci a tous !
437
Tant que le dd ne bouffe pas toute la bande passante de la carte son tout va bien...
438
Au pire je passe sur USB 2...... au pire...
439
Salut,

J'ai un powerbook G4 et un DD laCie Firewire800/400/usb2 ainsi qu'un graveur de DVD LaCie.

J'ai fait plusieurs tests. J'ai branché d'abord, le DD sur le firewire 400 et la Fireface sur le fw800 ça fonctionnait jusqu'au moment ou j'ai acheté les Ivory et là j'ai vu apparaitre en Rouge : Disk too slow... J'ai changé la config en achetant comme toi (presque) une carte Firewire avec 2 ports en 800 et un en 400. du coup ça fonctionne!!

De plus, achète vraiment la carte (dont tu as mis le lien) car de chainer les périphs firewire pour l'audio est très déconseillé!! Car en effet tu partages ta bande passante (800 ou 400 Mb/s) donc si tu fait de l'audio ou que tu utilises des synthés virtuels tu risques de créer un énorme goulot d'étranglement au niveau de ton port Firewire.

Donc oui ta solution est cette carte... pour les autres éviter vraiment le chainage.

@ plus
"Joue au dessus de ce que tu sais"
440
En ce qui concerne les cartes PCI firewire, il existe à peut près tout (noname à 20 euros et Adaptec à 80 euros)... comment s'assurer de la compatibilité avec la fireface ?

perso, sur la mienne (noname à 30 euros) c'est un contrôleur VIA. Ca marche bien, mais j'ai un apriori sur ces composants (surement à cause de la mauvaise réputation, fondée ou non, des chipsets VIA avec des hardware et software Audio)

comment savoir quel controleur utilisé, si certain sont pas recommandés, etc... ?