Topic: Things I like about my FF800
There's been a heap of people posting with problems lately, that could give a prospective purchaser an unbalanced view, so here's a few things that make me a happy Fireface purchaser on XP SP2. I came here as a previously moderately disgruntled Motu Traveller user.
- sounds great. Noticed immediately I plugged in the headphones for the first time and listened to playback, and not a subtle difference. This wasn't a retail glow either. I put it down to the superior clocking.
- driver is tiny download, and driver resource footprint on the computer is tiny.
- fast, the hardware and the software boot and work instantly, and respond to changes instantly (couldn't say the same of my previous interface).
- complete absence of mysterious driver behaviours for me, like the interface "disappearing" to the software. Previously this was a daily occurrence for me despite a bare bones system tweaked for audio, and all the recommended hardware like TI firewire etc. Now I get better audio performance on my general bloatware boot partition, than I did previously on my lean audio boot partition.
- professional features, many. For a home noob user it could be daunting. For a professional there's everything you need here from an interface at this price.
--- great clocking and control options in the driver panel
--- totalmix incredibly flexible and with handy features
--- digicheck, I feel like I got a free DK audio meter. I bought another display and have various digicheck functions running on that when I'm mixing. It has improved my mixing, especially with the K scales. Brilliant. I do think RME should speed the development of it for MAC Intel users though.
- when the driver has errors with the firewire it TELLS YOU (the error count in the driver panel). this helped me diagnose a firewire 800 express card issue.
- the TCO SMPTE appears as a virtual midi MTC to any application. Brilliant.
- I found a serious bug with the Motu (preamp gains changing by themselves). Took the support people 2 months to respond and another 6 to fix it. I can't see RME being that slow to respond ever.
- the limited front panel space is used intelligently for the things you really need, like preamp gain knobs. Even though the 48v switch is in software, there is a clear indicator for each channel. Excellent.
- doing a live FOH mix on a yamaha digital board, I can record 18 direct digital splits and 2 pairs of ambience mics and I've still got 6 more analog line inputs free, on my 4 year old laptop, in 1RU. Brilliant.
- the FF800 is several years old, still manufactured, still supported, and still at the top of it's market sector. Done.
Glad I got that off my chest, thanks!
Pot.
Sequoia 17, W10 x64
https://bsound.co.nz/tools-nix