@ideaofnorth and @mzero thank you both so much. I completely misunderstood the mk4 owner’s manual and I’m going to blame that on a busy week at work and not enough sleep. Yup. That’s my excuse.

Thank you!

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Hey Rosten, I’ve a few questions for you about the Model 12 as I’ve been lately eyeing it. Much appreciated if you happen to have some insight about it and maybe a minute or two to answer my questions.

  1. When using the Model 12 in DAW controller mode to control, say, Ableton Live, is audio from the Model 12 routed into Live simply pre-fade directly into the DAW, without going through the channel strip?

  2. What’s your experience with latency with the Model 12 and a DAW combo been so far?

  3. Being a class compliant USB interface, have you by any chance used the Model 12 with an iPad Pro by any chance? If so, how has the experience been?

Thanks in advance!

I also interpreted the MOTU 828es manual to mean that a 1/4" TRS to 3.5mm TS cable was needed to transmit CV, so you’re at least not alone in that regard. I’ve never found anyone who sell those, so I’ve never tried it. @mzero thanks for clearing that up!

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Check out the Expert Sleepers floating ring cables. I use them to send cv from my MOTU Ultralite Mark 3 Hybrid to my eurorack. They work great!

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Your Motu Ultralite works fine in Big Sur?
I just contacted them, because their website states otherwise. Did you do a fresh install of Big Sur or did you just update the OS?

Nice to know it’s not just me!

@eblomquist I did come across those cables when I was researching this recently, but they seem to be out of stock everywhere. Have you used TS to TS cables as well, and do you notice any difference with the Motu?

I have never tried ts to ts so I don’t have any useful information on that, sorry!

However, see the ES page warning about cables:

In general special cables are recommended when using a DC-coupled audio interface as a source of CVs. Most audio interfaces have balanced outputs (on TRS (‘stereo’) jacks or XLRs), while synth CV inputs are unbalanced (usually on TS (‘mono’) jacks or minijacks). If you use a regular stereo or mono jack lead, you’ll be shorting out one of the balanced output signals (usually the R (ring) to the S (shield)). While this probably wouldn’t be a problem for normal audio use, when outputting the sustained voltages that are useful as CVs you risk damaging the interface hardware.

“Risk damaging” is all I needed to hear!

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Hey, happy to answer your questions as I can.

  1. You can actually set the routing point to be pre-comp. & pre-eq, post compressor & pre-eq, or post compressor/eq. It is all pre-fader afaik. And to be honest, I only messed with the post compressor and post eq modes in order to confirm that for you just now. (and it seems like it gets a little fiddly and confusing in terms of the live monitoring setting when you do that).

  2. I have not noticed significant latency when recording live through the Tascam into ableton. I’m not really a millisecond watcher but ableton says ~4.6ms/32 samples and I’m not getting clicks. Syncing Live with my hardware sequencers and stuff definitely takes some fiddling and delay compensation but i’ve gotten it to a place where it all feels locked in. It seems like I need to adjust this by ear per-session and I don’t honestly do it all that often - I usually track everything into the model 12 and then bring it into live for additional fiddling.

  3. I’ve never used it with an ipad. It has a single usb-c connection and it seems to like being plugged directly into my computer without a hub. I haven’t tested it extensively but I remember it being fiddly once, plugged it in directly while troubleshooting, it worked, and I haven’t tried it a different way since.

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update on my previous statement: it works…sort of.

audio has worked seamlessly. I’ve had a few tiny hiccups on occasion, but I think they came from somewhere else in my chain.

however, every time that my macbook is closed and goes to sleep with the ultralite on, it crashes my laptop. so I have to shut down my mk4 before I close my laptop. or deal with the crashes.

not ideal, but livable enough assuming it’s a short-term thing.

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Thank you for taking your time to elaborate on these!

Im planning on repurposing my a&h zed10fx (which was mainly my pa mixer back when there were gigs) to use with my modular…has anyone done this and are there any concerns about modular levels damaging the line ins? Im sure i can attenuate on the way in, just wondering about whats the ‘worst case’ and might i fry my channels.

cool. thanks for the feedback.

Yup, I’ve used that mixer with my modular. Works just fine, altho I always use attenuators on the way out for any mixer I’m using. I like the Pittsburgh mixers that double as attenuators. Also always a useful additional stage for dialing in additional control of saturation to the mic preamp stages. No worries about damaging anything that I’ve ever encountered, but maybe there’s something I don’t know.

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The spec sheet for the ZED-10FX says it accepts up to +31dBu on the line inputs, which is just shy of 78 volts peak-peak - so unless you’ve got some very odd modules you should be OK.

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To add to that, most modular systems use ±12V or ±15V supplies, so anything they generate or process will be clipped to well under 24Vpp or 30Vpp inside the system in any case.

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Is frying mixer/soundcard inputs with too hot signals really a thing that happens? I get that maybe if you put a full scale modular output into a small battery powered consumer speaker it might have problems, but I see a lot of people say to be careful but I don’t hear many stories of bad things actually happening to pro or semipro gear.

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In my experience, most semi-pro / pro level mixers and audio interfaces I’ve used that are specced to work with around +4 dBu nominal levels handle modular audio levels just fine with zero to minimal attenuation. The not-so-professional ones designed for smaller nominal levels and little headroom (eg. many portable consumer devices) simply clip pretty badly unless you attenuate.

I haven’t yet seen or heard anyone blow up a mixer or audio interface input by feeding it too loud signal from a modular synth yet. Which doesn’t mean it couldn’t happen - just that considering the amount of interfaces and modular systems me and people I know have used without worry, it’s bound to be a pretty rare accident due to less than foolproof design of the mixer’s / interface’s input stage, I suppose.

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thanks everyone for the responses! into the loop goes the zed.

Anyone have any good resources to understand the relationship between volts, dB, dBu, and volume? I feel like I have some basics, but something to firm up my understanding would help a lot.

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In short:

  • Volts: measure of difference in electrical potential between two points. If only one point is referenced, the other point is the “ground” signal, which is treated as the reference and is treated as 0V.
  • dB: a way to express the ratio between two quantities. When measuring amplitudes (including volts), it is 20 * log₁₀ (v₁/v₂). So if one amplitude is 20db relative to another, then it is 10x as big. An amplitude that is twice as large is ~6db larger.
  • dBV: a dB measure of voltage relative to 1 volt. So 0dBV means a signal that is 1V. -10dBV means a signal that is 0.3162 volts.
  • dBu: a dB measure of voltage relative to 0.7746 volts (!). So a 0dBu means a signal that is 0.7746 volts, +4dBu means a signal that is 1.228 volts.

Notes:

  • all the voltage measures above are RMS - because AC signals vary, we need to agree on how to measure them. “Peak to peak” measure, for a sine wave, will be bigger by √2. (Wave forms with the same peak to peak measure will have different RMS values. RMS is a better measure of the total energy in the waveform.)
  • Every 6db amplitude is closely 2x the amplitude of the signal. It is roughly perceived as a bit less than twice as loud. Perceptual loudness is complicated, but this is an okay approximation.
  • There is 11.782 db difference in the reference level for consumer gear (-10dBV) and professional gear (+4dBu). That’s a lot!
  • A 5 V peak-to-peak sine wave from your modular, is ~3.5V RMS… which is 13dBu - so more than 9dB above reference level. This is why eurorack level is so “hot”. Some modules can produce signals as hot as 10 V p-to-p, which would be even hotter.
  • The problem with putting a pro level signal into consumer gear, or modular signal into pro gear is that if the peak-to-peak voltage exceeds the headroom of the device (the amount of voltage over the reference voltage it can accept) - and then things start to clip. Remember that peak-to-peak is always more than RMS, and dBV and dBu are w.r.t. RMS. — Headroom varies considerably from device to device, though as a rule professional level gear has more headroom than consumer. This is why you can put your modular into a pro-level mixer and it’s okay so long as you lower the faders to match other signals.

Quick read:

Good calculator:
https://www.analog.com/en/design-center/interactive-design-tools/dbconvert.html#


Updated: incorporated @kbra’s notes & some minor editing

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