Whats the difference between a bad interface and a good interface?

professorlamp

I are Joe
Nov 2, 2009
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Wales, United Kingdom
I dont know if it concerns me though because I use my mixer to plug my mics into but my mixer runs through to an interface so, would someone care to elaborate on said 'Topic'

Feel free to facepalm if this is a stupid question
 
a good interface has 8 or more inputs, so you dont have to use such a crude rig to record a drum set :P

I used to do pretty much the same thing. if you buy a good 8 channel firewire interfau cce, you can sell the mixer board, and just use the interfaces pre`s to record your drum tracks. That way, you have separate recorded tracks for each part of the drum kit (snare basss drum toms cymbals) so an manipulate them to enhance the best qualities of each element.

ahh your questions bring back old memories of buying my first interface and beginning my journey as an audio engineer.

I demand you read through all of this thread

http://www.ultimatemetal.com/forum/andy-sneap/542538-when-i-first-started-out-i-______________.html
 
Well depending on what mixer you have, the preamps on it may or may not be better than those on board your particular interface, so you shouldn't feel you necessarily have to use it (unless you're running multiple channels into the mixer and outputting the stereo mixdown to the interface, so you have to use the mixer preamps :ill: ) - but even putting quality of preamps aside, the other differences between interfaces I would say are 1) quality of A/D and especially D/A converters; differences between the latter in different models are much more noticeable than the former, because the whole mix is being channeled through the D/A converters, to the stereo output, to your monitors/speakers/headphones, so inferior D/A converters will have a less defined stereo image and seemingly not as full low end (and these statements are from personal experience) 2) Driver stability, this I'm finding is a big one - how easily and dependably the computer recognizes the interface when it's connected; how often it drops out or has conflicts with other devices (such as internal wi-fi cards) that have to be disabled; how low you can get the latency while maintaining stability; and if you're on a PC, how well WDM playback is integrated (meaning, for all sounds outside of the DAW, e.g. music playback, gaming, youtube, etc.), to name a few, and of course, 3) feature set - how many outputs it has, whether it has ADAT capability or not, how many headphone outs, dedicated monitor control knob, etc.
 
marcus totally nailed it. I thought you meant what should YOU be looking for in an interface. I assume you are running through a mixer board because you want to mic a drum kit, or something that requires multiple mics, but you only have 1 or 2 inputs on your interface. thats why i figured an interface with more inputs is better for you.

There are alot of things to consider when choosing an interface, but dont get caught up in them all, because most of the popular interfaces are very similar, and the difference in quality is negligible.

check out this thread
http://www.ultimatemetal.com/forum/equipment/513601-getting-audiointerface-faq.html
 
The main reason is because i can set the gain structure and see my levels on a mixer , can you do this on an interface? If you can it, doesn't really affect me to much because either way audio is getting converted and into my computer so technically same road different car :P
 
hmm, i think alesis has an 8 channel interface with a led level meter, but most fw interfaces just have led peak detectors. I have an maudio profire, the hardware only has clip detectors, but the control station has level meters for every input and output as well as your software sends and returns.

which interface are you using out of curiosity? is it a pci interface?
 
I would say that good conversion quality and versatility / amount of I/O are the most important factors in determining whether you have a "good" or "bad" interface. Not all interfaces have preamps and/or drivers so sometimes it depends on the specific interface and recording situation.
 
I use the SPDIF connection to go from my interface to my sound card
so while the interface does have drivers ( USB drivers ) I dont actually
use them. Also, SPDIF gives me better latency but has the limitation
that I can only record 2 mono inputs at once.