Interesting. A bit uninformed where he mentioned that the loop-back feature is rare. Apparently, he hasn’t been paying attention.Michael Canavan wrote:...
Oh, and the reviews on your new audio card are gushing to say the least.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n25WIe_J4YY
Nope. All the new USB interfaces have it. Whatever those new ICs are, everyone’s using them now or will. Some are only offering 2-4 channels (MOTU, Mackie); NI is 6 while others are 2–6 &18 channels (Behringer, Scarlett, M-Audio, Steinberg). Apparently, this is not limited to USB 2 since Steinberg and Metric Halo are offering USB 3. (MOTU’s other USB 2/3 devices have no loop-back/blend while UAD is Windows only).
Although Mackie has 2–4 ch. desktop boxes like everyone else, they also have the new ProFxv3 line using these in traditional flat mixers from 6–30 channels. I bought & returned the 6 channel & just took delivery on the 12 channel that I will keep. As for I/O timing through loop-back, the Mackie tests the same for me. The Onyx preamps are extremely good on my SM7b and are a bit hotter — enough so that I could use it without my Cloudlifter CL-z (not that I will).
One thing that the video pointed out that I hadn’t noticed is that each channel of the M2 has its own loop-back blend control(!). Besides the nice meters, this appears to be unique—everyone else has only blend one control for the entire unit (The ProFxv3 can bring USB 3/4 into an aux on the 12 channel up).
Unless there’s something at NAMM that changes my mind, I’ll be buying a M2 or M4 for the desktop come January. I’ve already tested loop-back/blend on the Mackie and reallY like it.
Since I can use the Mackie to bring in up to 12 channels analog, I think it’s time to put my pristine 828mkII up for sale.
I can’t imagine trying Performer Lite or the two apps I can download free because of the Mackie.