Hi Jy, welcome to RME user forum.
I could imagine that in certain situations it could be an advantage to have a MIDI port directly on the recording interface.
Some people prefer RME PCI/PCIe-based cards for time-critical instruments like electronic drums.
RME drivers have a high-quality and low latency.
I see here several options.
1. I think the best choice would be the HDSPe AIO Pro €729
https://www.rme-audio.de/de_hdspe-aio-pro.html
- 30 channel I/O
- Balanced (*) stereo analog in- and output, 24-bit/192kHz
- AD/DA converter with only 5/6.25ms samples latency at single speed
- 1x ADAT digital I/O, supporting 192 kHz via S/MUX4 operation
- 1x SPDIF digital I/O, 192 kHz-capable
- 1x AES/EBU digital I/O, 192 kHz-capable
- 1x High-Power Headphone Output, separate DA-converter and playback device (two output levels, high/low power)
- 1x MIDI I/O Hi-Speed Low-Jitter MIDI
- Outputs with Mute relays
- +24 dBu I/O Levels
- SteadyClock FS
- breakout cables: HDSPe AIO Pro: Analog breakout cable, unbalanced (BO9632CMKHPro)
- optional: Word clock module, TCO module (both connected through internal ribbon cable)
- optional breakout cables:
- HDSPe AIO/AIO Pro: Analog breakout cable, balanced (BO9632XLRMKH)
- HDSPe AIO/AIO Pro: Digital breakout cable, AES/EBU & SPDIF (BO968)
(*) The HDSPe AIO Pro ships in a basic version with analog RCA/phono breakout cables (headphone: TRS jack). Therefore all analog I/Os are unbalanced. An analog XLR breakout cable is available as option (headphone: Neutrik TRS locking jack), turning analog into balanced mode.
PCIe based and ASIO buffer sizes down to 32 samples at single speed.
Based on the reference processors AK5572 and AK4490 derived from the high-end AD/DA converter ADI-2 Pro.
Analog inputs: uses the circuit design of the ADI-2 Pro (+24 / +19 / +13 / +4 dBu).
Analog outputs: reference levels (balanced: +24 / +19 / +13 / +4 dBu; unbalanced: +19 / +13 / +4 / -2 dBu)
Features a dedicated attenuator in the output section, resulting in an increased signal-to-noise ratio and a lower output impedance at low reference levels.
Newly developed, powerful and extremely transparent headphone output.
Thanks to mute relay including switchable output levels, there is no unwanted crackling noise at the headphone output and the analog XLR and RCA outputs when switching on the computer.
2. HDSPe AIO, one of the older PCIe cards, from used market (IMHO, the AIO Pro is superior)
- 1 x Stereo Analog I/O (192 kHz)
- 1 x ADAT I/O (up to 192 kHz via S/MUX4)
- 1 x SPDIF I/O (192 kHz)
- 1 x AES/EBU I/O (192 kHz)
- 1 x MIDI I/O
- 1 x Phones Output (separate DAC, 192 kHz)
PCIe based and ASIO buffer sizes down to 32 samples at single speed.
3. If you need a more portable and USB based version with fast converters, then get the Babyface Pro FS, €809
https://www.rme-audio.de/de_babyface-pro-fs.html
- 12 Input and 12 Output channels
- 4 x Analog Inputs (Mic, Line, Instrument)
- 4 x Analog Outputs (2 x XLR, 2 x Phones)
- 1 x ADAT I/O or 1 x SPDIF I/O optical
- 1 x MIDI I/O
- 1 x USB 2.0 (USB 3 compatible)
- Digital Gain control on all inputs
- Separate outputs for high and low impedance headphones
- TotalMix FX (with EQ, Reverb, Echo)
I would directly buy the optional power supply RME NTCARDBUS-X just in case power from USB might not be sufficient, its only €29 more.
USB based, ASIO buffer sizes down to 48 samples at single speed.
4. The RayDAT, although an excellent card, but is in your case maybe not the best choice as it is a fully digital card, and you would need a Behringer ADA8200 additionally. The ADA8200 has IMHO not the quality of RME components and analog section.
The RayDAT has a variety of useful I/O ports and is in this regard a safe invest into the future.
- 36 Inputs / 36 Outputs
- 4 x ADAT I/O (up to 192 kHz via S/MUX4)
- 1 x AES/EBU I/O (up to 192 kHz)
- 1 x SPDIF I/O (up to 192 kHz)
- 2 x MIDI I/O
There are additional modules available, like e.g. a word clock module, if you should need one in the future.
Cost: RayDAT + ADA8200 = €585 + €211 = €796
5. if you have an older PC with PCI slots one of the older RME cards, maybe even from used market
I, personally, wouldn't invest into PCI equipment anymore, only if you might have an older system with PCI slot.
I only mention it as this was one of the cheapest options in the past to get those from used market.
PCIe based and ASIO buffer sizes down to 32 samples at single speed.
HDSP 9632
-1 x Analog I/O (192 kHz)
-1 x ADAT I/O (at 96 kHz via S/Mux)
-1 x SPDIF I/O (192 kHz)
-1 x MIDI I/O
-1 x Phones-Output
optional word clock module
HDSP 9652
-3 x ADAT I/O
-1 x SPDIF I/O
-2 x MIDI I/O
-Word Clock I/O
-1x ADAT Sync In
BR Ramses - UFX III, 12Mic, XTC, ADI-2 Pro FS R BE, RayDAT, X10SRi-F, E5-1680v4, Win10Pro22H2, Cub14