Jeff wrote:Yes, I think so. Usually if there is trouble, it's the PCI slot. The PCIe slot should work perfectly in a reasonably modern motherboard.
Thanks Jeff. That's what everybody from RME is telling me.
However, I was just told this by a dealer:
there are some potential issues with having a PCI and a PCIe card on the same machine, and the clocking on this can get a little hairy (hence the internal connection). The PCIe card does come with the internal ribbon cable (connects 2 x AES cards together), and you only use the cable IF you have the first AES card as the primary clock (as apposed to the first Aurora).
Do you know what he is getting at?
He seems to imply that the internal connection of the RME card and the expansion board makes clocking "hairy", but I have this internal ribbon connection between my PCI AES-32 and the expansion board and my clocking is never hairy. Will the addition of a second card and a connected expansion board, this time PCIe, make clocking hairy? I did not get that impression from your previous posts. So, I am confused. Or, the dealer is.
I am not using any external word clock connections from my RME PCI AES 32 to my Aurora 16 and am using the Aurora 16 as my Internal Clock. It was my intention to use my current Aurora 16 as Master to a Slave Aurora 16, connecting the Word Clock OUT of the first one to the Word Clock IN of the second Aurora with a 75 Ohm Mogami Word Clock Lead. Is this an uncommon clocking connection?
Thanks for your thoughts.
Frank
Cubase 6 64 bit, Windows 7, RME AES HDSP-32, Lynx Aurora 16. Bricasti M7, API 2500, etc.