isaac wrote:Just a thought. Is there any reason why you need to use the AES output on the mytek? If the SPDIF works great then why not just use that? Is your custom cable passing audio?
Isaac P
I've heard conflicting information about AES vs. SPDIF. I've heard that AES is the "professional" interface, and SPDIF is the "consumer" interface. I've also heard some people say there's no difference, but they always seem to waffle about that a bit.
Also, if there's "no difference" between AES and SPDIF - then why do they both exist?
Since I couldn't get a straight, simple answer about AES vs. SPDIF anywhere, I decided to err on the side of caution and use AES, since it's "professional".
So it would be nice to get some clarification as to whether it makes any difference. I've heard a lot of essay-length answers to this along the lines of "It shouldn't make any difference" or "It's pretty much just as good". What I've *not* heard anyone say is "There is no difference at all in terms of audio".
If that last statement is true, I'd like to know that unequivocally, without a rambling, inconclusive, essay-length lecture on the subject. I don't want to hear about "if you connect the ring 3 to tip 4 and make sure the sleeve is grounded to your local nuclear power plant, then maybe it'll work, or you could solder ring tip 5 to sleeve 4 and buy a welding machine and weld it into ring tip and sleeve 87, but it probably shouldn't matter, unless the length is over 2.63 meters, then SPDIF is just as good, but not really, because it's the consumer interface, but it's kind of, almost, sort of just as good, especially when you connect ring to the tip 4 to the unbalanced sleeve, but you don't know what unbalanced is, so let me explain that for an hour, and the sleeve is grounded to my grandmother's 120 volt electrical box, it should be probably somewhere near just as good, I think, but I'm not really sure etc. etc. ad nauseum".
I WANT A CABLE THAT WORKS: THE END.
The cable is passing audio. It's just that it also passes a lot of electrical noise (loud hiss and other noise); this noise gets quieter if I touch my computer (macbook pro), then gets louder again if I stop touching the computer. The electrical noise also gets louder if I go near the electrical outlet, or near my mic preamp, and gets quieter if I touch those components. There is clearly an electrical issue with this cable - not sure if it's because of the instructions on this thread being wrong, or if Redco built the cable wrong. I purchased two of these cables, and both have the same problem.
Since this cable is not at all common, and is not commercially available at all, it would be REAL NICE if RME could set something up with a vendor so people could purchase this cable without going through hell, and wasting days and hours and weeks guessing, troubleshooting, and dicking around with the weird cable that RME for some reason thought would be a good design idea. I'm sure many vendors would be thrilled to get all this business. All RME has to do is point the vendor to the specs in the manual, and they can sell the product labeled specifically as "AES Cable for Fireface 800". Then no one else will have to wonder about this, or waste their time, as I and many others already have. Message to RME: Not everyone on earth is an electrician, or knows how to solder, or wants to know how to solder. As a guitarist, I'm a musician, not an electrician. I play an instrument, and I buy the cables for it at the store, and that works real well for me and millions of other people. Find a vendor, and make this cable available, and stop presuming that everyone knows how to solder, or even wants to know how to solder.
Or gee, maybe they could INCLUDE A FREE CABLE WITH THE $1700 FIREFACE???? I mean, I got a free pick with my Gibson Les Paul.