Topic: Fireface 802 vs UCX DSP power?

Is there any data how much DSP power these two have?

or any data at all regarding DSP

Re: Fireface 802 vs UCX DSP power?

Whats the background of your question ? You know that you can not use any VST or VSTi in TotalMix FX ?

BR Ramses - UFX III, 12Mic, XTC, ADI-2 Pro FS R BE, RayDAT, X10SRi-F, E5-1680v4, Win10Pro22H2, Cub13

3 (edited by ploki 2019-07-18 15:59:09)

Re: Fireface 802 vs UCX DSP power?

ramses wrote:

Whats the background of your question ? You know that you can not use any VST or VSTi in TotalMix FX ?

yeah.

Looking for a new live performance interface, and will do some processing outside DAW, and was wondering how much power these two have, since they're my top contenders for replacement.


fwiw, UFX+ is planned for studio replacement, main totalmix fx use there will be submixes (preprocessing drums for hp mix and such) outside DAW

Re: Fireface 802 vs UCX DSP power?

Still not clear what kind of "power" you are referring to ....


Regards
Daniel Fuchs
RME

Regards
Daniel Fuchs
RME

5

Re: Fireface 802 vs UCX DSP power?

Here is an example of the UFX.

@ 48 kHz sample rate

All inputs with LC and EQ = 30 channels, Rev and Echo active, 15 stereo output EQs and 3 stereo LC. Total: 60 EQs, 40 LC, Reverb, Echo.

Switching off DURec gives bit more DSP power: 60 EQs, 60 LC, Reverb, Echo, 4 Dynamics.

Switching off Reverb gives again more DSP power for the remaining FX.

As the DSP power scales it just matters how much you use of what.

For example without DURec:

60 EQ and 60 LC plus 4 Dynamics, or 60 EQ and 40 LC and 8 Dynamics, or 36 EQ and 36 LC and 14 Dynamics and 10 Auto Level.

Using 96 kHz or 192 kHz the numbers crunch down, of course.

Regards
Matthias Carstens
RME

6 (edited by ploki 2019-07-24 11:03:36)

Re: Fireface 802 vs UCX DSP power?

RME Support wrote:

Still not clear what kind of "power" you are referring to ....


Regards
Daniel Fuchs
RME

what MC said.

My question was about the amount of Totalmix FX processing power (Instances of EQs/Dynamics/whatever) between the interfaces, whether there's any difference at all or they all use the same chip.