J
Joerg
Guest
miso wrote:
That could be an option. Just not the Ebay path, this has to turn into a
product some day. Preferably with extra cages and backplanes.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Joerg wrote:
krw@attt.bizz wrote:
On Tue, 25 Feb 2014 14:01:26 -0800, Joerg <invalid@invalid.invalid
wrote:
Folks,
The AC97 standard describes only up to four sound chips operated
simultaneously, on page 21:
ftp://download.intel.com/support/motherboards/desktop/sb/ac97_r23.pdf
What if one would like to connect, say, 20 of them and all are supposed
to run nicely synchronous? Like in a digital mixer board for music.
Why AC97? There are dozens of DACs and CODECs around with all sorts
of interface options.
The goal was to use sound chips because of their attractive pricing
while offering 20+ bits of dynamic range and potentially high sample
rates. Is there another standard that comes to mind?
I know how to roll this using individual ADCs and DACs but that gets
expensive. Plus we'll have to write our own drivers and all this fun
stuff.
If you don't want to roll your own cards, find a Magma PCI cage. I can drive
7 sound cards at once on mine, well on Linux. No idea about windows. My
Magma was from an old recording studio. I wouldn't want to pay the price of
one new, so look on ebay. And ignore all the buy it now assholes. I got mine
for about $200 plus change years ago when they were worth something.
Nowadays they have fancy multichannel soundcards. You need the cage,
backplane, and most important, the freaking PCI host cards. One your your
PC, the other in the cage. So an eight slot Magma runs 7 PCI cards.
If you were really clever, you could build this yourself. They use Pericom
chips and off the shelf PCI backplanes. I found it easier just to by a Magma
and cheap sound cards rather than make a project out of it. The setup is for
SIGINT, so the cards works independent of each other. But there is an
opensource Linux program for multi-channel recording.
TI makes some chips that are 8 channel oversampled converters. They use
individual analog front ends then multiplex the digital in a manner that is
transparent to the user.
That could be an option. Just not the Ebay path, this has to turn into a
product some day. Preferably with extra cages and backplanes.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/