You can stay at recording in single speed, then 1x ADAT I/O (IN and OUT) is sufficient to you.
I only wanted to mention it to you to give you an overview.
> I need the firewire connection only for the initial configuration, right
Yes, because the FF800 supports stand-alone operation, see manual
"The Fireface 800 has an internal memory to permanently store all configuration data. These are:
- Settings dialog, sample rate, clock mode Master/Slave, configuration of the channels and the digital I/Os.
- TotalMix The complete mixer state."
If you have a Mac with thunderbolt, then I remember from forum postings, that with a combination of thunderbolt cable and adapter the connection of such a device might be possible. But if I recall correctly, then it has to be Apple adapters, the other cheaper ones won't work.
Then I think I would get the FF800, theoretically you could even try to use this as your main recording interface and connect the UC behind ADAT.
Maybe somebody with Apple knowledge can help here.
I am thinking about something like this:
Apple---TB-----TB FW Adapter---FF800--ADAT1 OUT------------------>ADAT IN--- UC--->Active Monitors and Headphones
\----ADAT1 IN--------------------ADAT OUT---/
ADAT2 completely free, switchable from ADAT to optical SPDIF
This way you could add later even an ADI-2 DAC for your monitoring section
to get a better converter
By this, you would have a FF800 as 56ch interface, the former flagship interface before UFX and its successors
with the following feature set:
10 x Analog I/O
1 x Stereo Headphone Out
2 x ADAT I/O or 1 x ADAT I/O plus 1 x SPDIF I/O optical
1 x SPDIF I/O coaxial
1 x Word Clock I/O
1 x MIDI I/O
4 x Mic/Line Inputs with Preamps
1 x Instrument input adjustable
2 x FireWire 800
1 x FireWire 400
optional: Time Code Module
TotalMix
Just a thought, the forum colleagues with Apple might help here to find the best solution.
On the other hand, combination of UC and a preamp or adda converter could be the more solid invest.
USB is definitively more future proof ....
The combination of UC and ADA8200 is the cheapest solution, and you get the best buck for only little money.
The 8200 can not only be used as a preamp but also as AD/DA converter.
You can route from ADAT to its analog outputs… making it flexible in use.
So it can also easily get clock via ADAT, so you need only two TOSLINK cables, no hassles with Word Clock cabling.
It has dip switches on the back to get clock from ADAT to make ADA8200 to a clock slave.
BR Ramses - UFX III, 12Mic, XTC, ADI-2 Pro FS R BE, RayDAT, X10SRi-F, E5-1680v4, Win10Pro22H2, Cub14