latency free monitoring?
Greetings Everyone
I have a SCOPE card, and am wondering if there is any provision for "latency-free monitoring", which I presume would bypass software (?) during recording.
I need to live-record 8 channels and hear it all realtime as it is being performed...w/o an external mixer.
I admit to knowing nothing about this as related to using this card - which BTW I love
All input welcome, thanks in advance
Ed Mann
I have a SCOPE card, and am wondering if there is any provision for "latency-free monitoring", which I presume would bypass software (?) during recording.
I need to live-record 8 channels and hear it all realtime as it is being performed...w/o an external mixer.
I admit to knowing nothing about this as related to using this card - which BTW I love
All input welcome, thanks in advance
Ed Mann
Yes, all IO are latency free - or almost, there's a sample or 2 off - inherent to the ad/da conversion. It works the same on any digital mixing console, dsp's being hosted in a dedicated console or on a PCI card.
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could you elaborate, please ?
oversampling isn't interpolating over a certain period, but processing at a higher clockrate.
The number of units may increase, but the timeslices decrease, so at the ends it's probably on par.
I only measured the time to send a Scope signal to a digital mixer via adat and then back into scope, which gave me 20 samples delay, equivalent to 5 samples per adat pass.
dunno how to measure conversion speed
cheers, tom
oversampling isn't interpolating over a certain period, but processing at a higher clockrate.
The number of units may increase, but the timeslices decrease, so at the ends it's probably on par.
I only measured the time to send a Scope signal to a digital mixer via adat and then back into scope, which gave me 20 samples delay, equivalent to 5 samples per adat pass.
dunno how to measure conversion speed

cheers, tom
There was a thread at REP about it once in the Dan Lavry moderated section. I could be wrong about the reason, but I remember it as oversampling being the one.
You can measure the delay in your entire converter chain by sending a signal from Scope out thru analog (or your external converters analog) then back thru one or the other analog and record it simultatiously with the original signal within Scope. Check the waveform and count how meny samples the doubleconverted signal is behind.
You can measure the delay in your entire converter chain by sending a signal from Scope out thru analog (or your external converters analog) then back thru one or the other analog and record it simultatiously with the original signal within Scope. Check the waveform and count how meny samples the doubleconverted signal is behind.
Look, someone did all the calculations and measurements (allright, it was v1 hardware) and posted the results on http://www.planetz.com/Pulsar/PerformanceLatency.html !
If it may consolidate you, the delay is inherent to any format conversion, at least caused by the buffers of the translator. It will occur in any hardware device, be it a large Tascam ADAT console or a pulsar daughterboard.
Enjoy!
If it may consolidate you, the delay is inherent to any format conversion, at least caused by the buffers of the translator. It will occur in any hardware device, be it a large Tascam ADAT console or a pulsar daughterboard.
Enjoy!
more has been done with less
https://soundcloud.com/at0m-studio
https://soundcloud.com/at0m-studio