> If I heard an AB that blew me away...sure...but havent had that to date..
Just by the way because you mentioned that you see no reason to change. If money is not an obstacle, then I would always recommend today to a combination of RME recording interface (UFX II / UFX+) and ADI-2 Pro converter for monitoring. KaiS reported that he was very satisfied, especially with the D/A filter setting “Slow”: https://forum.rme-audio.de/viewtopic.ph … 8#p178258.
Here is an Excel list that I created to list all important information about RME USB/FW/TB interfaces of the past and the current models. There you see also a line where you can read the converter latency of all products and other useful information.
The blog article: https://www.tonstudio-forum.de/blog/Ent … B-MADIfac/
The direct link to the Excel file: https://www.tonstudio-forum.de/attachme … 4-08-xlsx/
This kills two birds with one stone. Excellent converter quality and speed at the main interface. USB2/3 is the de-facto standard today and is fully supported by Windows. However, you should follow the chipset recommendations for USB3 (UFX+).
It is generally a good idea to install a separate USB3 card for the recording interface only in certain cases. The Sonnet USB3 card with FL1100 chipset is recommended. Clean board layout and well-functioning drivers that are integrated directly into Windows 10 using the more efficient interrupt handling scheme MSI (message signalled interrupts). This separates the audio interface from the rest of the USB2/3 infrastructure of the motherboard and prevents problems that can arise by connecting additional USB devices such as Bluetooth adapters.
You can also have a look at the converter shootout, where the ADI-2 Pro compares very well with 4x more expensive AD converters (and they can only do AD) and may even be superior to them in some use cases. The original WAV files are better viewed via the links below the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doHG32aXBDY
I am using two ADI-2 Pro R BE in my setup. One in the recording corner and one in front of my High-End HiFi. Even the 1st ADI-2 Pro years ago had a slightly better presentation compared to Accuphase own DAC module for the E-600 Class integrated amp with B&W 803D3 as speaker.
I need for example quick A/D and D/A conversion. Be it for “near-realtime” monitoring or to build a parallel effect loop for my Guitar amp. For this purpose, I am using an UFX+ to read from preamp (effect-send) and send audio directly to power amp (effect return), for this I require the converter to be as fast as possible. Then I add 100% wet FX to the port leading to effect send (power amp of the Marshall combo). This results in a much better sound instead of noodling the whole preamp signal though the effect processor before it enters the power amp of the Marshall combo amp.
If you compare converter latency of FF800, then you can see that it changed over the years significantly, its less than a third (27%) of the FF800 as you can see here (values taken from manual chapter "Latency and Monitoring":
FF800 @44.1 kHz: 44 samples A/D, 28 samples D/A => 0,98 + 0.63ms = 1,61 ms
UFX II @44.1 kHz: 13 samples A/D, 7 samples D/A => 0,28 + 0.16ms = 0,44 ms (27%, less than a third)
FF800 @96.0 kHz: 44 samples A/D, 28 samples D/A => 0,45 + 0.29ms = 0,74 ms
UFX II @96.0 kHz: 13 samples A/D, 7 samples D/A => 0,13 + 0.07ms = 0,2 ms (27%, less than a third)
Back to the concrete issue
Regarding your issue and clock settings, it's ok, the FF800 is clock master.
It indeed sounds as if the interface is not able anymore to properly process audio at this point.
Was this initially a 96 kHz recording? What happens
— if you record in single speed
— if you restrict the number of channels to transfer only analog ports over Firewire.
To find the root cause for this can be time-consuming.
You mentioned that you changed the system, so you have another mainboard, BIOS, Chipset, drivers, GPU.
Did you optimize your PC for audio?
Did you perform LatencyMon measuring to identify latency problems caused by bad drivers?
The latter can block a CPU core and if an audio process (driver, application) is being scheduled to run on this CPU core, it can create issues if audio cannot be processed in time.
Another issue was for me (with my system) that LatencyMon results were good, but I got audio glitches for around half a second. It took me 2 years to find the root cause. It was the nVidia graphic card. The cards also have an energy saving of their own, but nVidia doesn't deliver official tools anymore to turn energy saving off on their graphic cards.
I needed a special tool from a Russian developer to deactivate it.
A couple of questions regarding your system:
Did you turn off energy settings in the BIOS, C-States (sometimes also P-/T- States)?
Did you turn off clock spread spectrum in the BIOS to turn off little clock variations?
Do you use Turbo mode, this sometimes brings 100-200 MHz higher clock?
Is the Clock in your PC stable, or does it change?
What energy profile do you use in Windows 10, you can try to activate Ultimate Performance, as Admin you can make it visible/available by using this in the dos box (cmd): powercfg -duplicatescheme e9a42b02-d5df-448d-aa00-03f14749eb61
A collection of threads about performance troubleshooting here
https://forum.rme-audio.de/viewtopic.ph … 04#p186404
BR Ramses - UFX III, 12Mic, XTC, ADI-2 Pro FS R BE, RayDAT, X10SRi-F, E5-1680v4, Win10Pro22H2, Cub14