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iOS audio interface that can slave to S/PDIF?
My audio interface just died so I'm shopping for a new one. A while ago I bought a Roland/Edirol M-10MX digital mixer in hopes that I could use its 10 inputs to output a digital stereo mix into my NI Komplete Audio 6. I was disappointed to find out that this wouldn't work on iOS because I couldn't put the NI into slave mode. (It works however on a desktop where you can open the NI control panel and set it to slave).
Are there any class-compliant USB audio interfaces that will slave to S/PDIF clock? On an iPad where you don't have the benefit of a driver utility?
Comments
I think that might be difficult. You will probably need an interface with driver interface (even if it is in Class Compliant mode) where you can set the audio clock to internal or external. Maybe the RME Babyface (lightpipe SPDIF in) could sync to external audio clock?
Another option is to get a Windows tablet. I have one (around $300) with one USB3 socket in the attached keyboard. There I first put a USB hub, and can connect 7 devices including the audio/MIDI interface of course. Much better handling of projects (real keyboard for typing and application shortcuts, and a Kensington Trackball), and you record directly to USB drives.
It's also portable like any iPad, and with one single accumulator pack easy to power in the field (tablet, hub, and all USB devices, Phantom power). With a solar panel it becomes an entirely self sustainable recording system or DAW for 2-20 track projects.
May I ask which tablet? I am looking for a lightweight solution to track from a Yamaha digital board, driver is windows only. My netbook didn't have the processor to stream 64 channels back and forth, which has to be at that way even though I'm only actually recording 11-12 channels. I have a usb-gigabit ethernet adapter that I can use to plug in the cable from the board. A windows tablet was a solution I was thinking of But no budget for a surface pro (I often record the music at this church did gig because it's A jazz service and the musicians are top notch, so I like to have my own record of it to share with them and to practice mixing).