Discuss Quantum Series Interfaces Here
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Excuse my ignorance but its been quite some time since I built a custom PC or even looked into what's suitable for the DAW world. My current i5 works well but is getting a little long in the tooth. I don't have an interest in taking the time to research components and assemble it here. At the same time I don't need a "custom" (read expensive) build since I do little VSTi and most of my work is tracking vocals and editing. I almost never run out of processing power. My interest is minimal latency.

I am interested in moving to a Quantum or something similar in the future so my questions is....
Are there any "off the shelf" (Dell, Lenovo, HP, etc.) towers in the sub $1000 neighborhood that run Thunderbolt suitable for the Quantum?

It's all down hill from what's in front of the microphone. - Bob Olhsson

Studio One 6.5x Pro
***Optoplex i7 @ 3.4 ghz 32 gig mem running Windows 10 x64 Pro
*** Levono E520 with Win 10 x64 Pro
***Studio rig - MOTU Ultralite AVB*** Audient ASP/880***
***Mobile rig - Antelope Zen Q***
***Soundtoys/Plugin Alliance/Izotope/Slate/Nomad Factory plugs***
and....Lots of Outboard gear cause Pipeline is your friend
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by philangus on Fri Dec 21, 2018 5:40 am
Both of my Dell Precision towers (7910 and 5810) have the option for a Thunderbolt add-on card ( NK4P3 ) which I have purchased two of. they work perfectly with the Quantum and I've been using that for about a year now. the Dells are also almost completely silent making them perfect in a microphone environment, especially with the use of silent (and low power) SSD drives. I recommend them. I would just check the specs carefully of any system you look at. If it states USB C, it won't work! Overall, I am extremely happy with Dell. I even have a R620 1U rack running VMware with a load of Windows virtual servers and that is also silent and consumes about 80 - 100 watts during operation! Even with that going in the same room, I still don't have enough ambient noise to cause a problem!

There is also a HP part number for the exact same card. They are identical and I have tested an HP version in a Dell and it also works fine. This therefore means there must be HP towers out there which offer the same upgradability. these are Thunderbolt 2 cards, which is fine as the Quantum is Thunderbolt 2. The HP part number is F3F43AT. Remember though, one of these cards will not work in just any PC, only one which the motherboard has been designed to take it.

PS, don't listen to anyone who says the Quantum will work on a USB3 interface! You can use USB C devices in a Thunderbolt interface but not the other way around because discrete Thunderbolt chips are needed for it to work. To run a Thunderbolt device you need a Thunderbolt interface. The reason why Thunderbolt interfaces are not included in many PC motherboards as standard is due to licensing costs with Apple. There is no such thing as a PCI-X Thunderbolt interface card that you can plug in to any PC unless the motherboard has the necessary circuitry to accept it.
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by dgkenney on Fri Dec 21, 2018 5:33 pm
philangus wroteBoth of my Dell Precision towers (7910 and 5810) have the option for a Thunderbolt add-on card ( NK4P3 ) which I have purchased two of. they work perfectly with the Quantum and I've been using that for about a year now.


Thanks for sharing your actual experience and in taking the time to help with this. I really appreciate it. Would love to find something more in the ~$1000 mark but this is a good start to do some investigation.

Dan

It's all down hill from what's in front of the microphone. - Bob Olhsson

Studio One 6.5x Pro
***Optoplex i7 @ 3.4 ghz 32 gig mem running Windows 10 x64 Pro
*** Levono E520 with Win 10 x64 Pro
***Studio rig - MOTU Ultralite AVB*** Audient ASP/880***
***Mobile rig - Antelope Zen Q***
***Soundtoys/Plugin Alliance/Izotope/Slate/Nomad Factory plugs***
and....Lots of Outboard gear cause Pipeline is your friend
User avatar
by TerjeNorway on Wed Dec 26, 2018 8:40 am
if you change your mind and wanna built this is a good start:
Z390 AORUS XTREME
Image

My system
Intel Core i9-10900K Processor
Noctua NH-U12A CPU cooler
Gigabyte Z490 VISION D
Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB SSD
Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 3200MHz 64GB
MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ti Gaming X Trio 12G
StarTech Thunderbolt Cable 2M (TBOLTMM2MW)
StarTech Thunderbolt 3 to Thunderbolt 2 adapter (TBT3TBTADAP)
Neumann TLM 102 microphone
Presonus Quantum
Windows 10, Ableton 11, Cubase 10
User avatar
by dgkenney on Wed Dec 26, 2018 10:36 am
TerjeNorway wroteif you change your mind and wanna built this is a good start:
Z390 AORUS XTREME

Thanks

It's all down hill from what's in front of the microphone. - Bob Olhsson

Studio One 6.5x Pro
***Optoplex i7 @ 3.4 ghz 32 gig mem running Windows 10 x64 Pro
*** Levono E520 with Win 10 x64 Pro
***Studio rig - MOTU Ultralite AVB*** Audient ASP/880***
***Mobile rig - Antelope Zen Q***
***Soundtoys/Plugin Alliance/Izotope/Slate/Nomad Factory plugs***
and....Lots of Outboard gear cause Pipeline is your friend
User avatar
by Jim Roseberry on Thu Jan 17, 2019 1:39 pm
If you have the skills, you'll always be better off with a custom machine.
    - You can choose exactly what goes in
    - Motherboard will have all necessary parameters to achieve max performance and low/consitent DPC Latency
    - You can configure it exactly as needed
    - Easy upgrades/replacements

Best Regards,
Jim Roseberry
www.studiocat.com
[email protected]
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by dgkenney on Thu Jan 17, 2019 3:36 pm
Jim Roseberry wroteIf you have the skills, you'll always be better off with a custom machine.
    - You can choose exactly what goes in
    - Motherboard will have all necessary parameters to achieve max performance and low/consitent DPC Latency
    - You can configure it exactly as needed
    - Easy upgrades/replacements


Hi Jim,

Haven't spoken to you in years and years. You furnished me with an early rig I had using a Tango24 and a Dakota. Glad to see you are around this community.

Yeah, I've built quite a few machines in the past. I was just being lazy. I don't need maximum power as I use very few (if any) VSTi's and a lot of my processing is done out of the box. I just like to minimize latency (like the old Digi HD systems) and I think thunderbolt is the way to go.

It's all down hill from what's in front of the microphone. - Bob Olhsson

Studio One 6.5x Pro
***Optoplex i7 @ 3.4 ghz 32 gig mem running Windows 10 x64 Pro
*** Levono E520 with Win 10 x64 Pro
***Studio rig - MOTU Ultralite AVB*** Audient ASP/880***
***Mobile rig - Antelope Zen Q***
***Soundtoys/Plugin Alliance/Izotope/Slate/Nomad Factory plugs***
and....Lots of Outboard gear cause Pipeline is your friend
User avatar
by Jim Roseberry on Fri Jan 18, 2019 7:56 am
dgkenney, I certainly remember you! ;)

If you're wanting lowest possible latency, Thunderbolt-3 (necessary under Windows) and Quantum is the way to go.

I've posted this many times, but you can effectively do things like run Helix Native at 96k using a 32-sample ASIO buffer size.
That's 1ms total round-trip latency.
It's a substantial load on the machine, but audio in Studio One is completely glitch-free.

Best Regards,
Jim Roseberry
www.studiocat.com
[email protected]
User avatar
by TerjeNorway on Sun Feb 03, 2019 2:22 pm
Jim Roseberry wrote
I've posted this many times, but you can effectively do things like run Helix Native at 96k using a 32-sample ASIO buffer size.
That's 1ms total round-trip latency.
It's a substantial load on the machine, but audio in Studio One is completely glitch-free.

I guess you are talking about tracking vocals or instruments with minimum of tracks and minimum numbers of heavy third party plugins. Then maybe glitch free without clicks and pops.

My system
Intel Core i9-10900K Processor
Noctua NH-U12A CPU cooler
Gigabyte Z490 VISION D
Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB SSD
Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 3200MHz 64GB
MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ti Gaming X Trio 12G
StarTech Thunderbolt Cable 2M (TBOLTMM2MW)
StarTech Thunderbolt 3 to Thunderbolt 2 adapter (TBT3TBTADAP)
Neumann TLM 102 microphone
Presonus Quantum
Windows 10, Ableton 11, Cubase 10
User avatar
by Jim Roseberry on Tue Feb 05, 2019 12:56 am
TerjeNorway wroteI guess you are talking about tracking vocals or instruments with minimum of tracks and minimum numbers of heavy third party plugins. Then maybe glitch free without clicks and pops.


Obviously not with the most dense of projects (ie: huge orchestral mock-ups)
During tracking stage, audio is completely glitch-free.
With a fast well-configured machine, you'll push the CPU hard, but you can effectively record/monitor at those settings.
Studio One's "Hybrid Buffering" also helps in this regard.
A larger processing buffer is used for tracks that are merely playing back (much more CPU efficient) and a small (extremely small in this case) buffer is used for tracks that are being monitored via software.

Not all processes in a DAW can be multi-threaded.
Software based monitoring at ultra low latency settings isn't something that can be effectively/heavily multi-threaded. This is one reason why high clock-speed is important.

Been building DAWs professionally for ~25 years.
Running a i9-9900k based machine (8 cores, 16 processing threads all locked at 5GHz).

For someone looking to push the limits of ultra low latency performance, Studio One/Quantum is a hard combination to best.

Best Regards,
Jim Roseberry
www.studiocat.com
[email protected]
User avatar
by PAE Seth on Fri Mar 29, 2019 2:14 pm
I built my X99 machine back in 2016 just for Quantum.

I have a full Quantum 4848 + DP88 rig capable of recording over 100 channels.

Rock solid at 64 samples. I could do 32, but I wouldn't run that many tracks to be safe.

PC #1: Asus Prime Z690-P, i5-12600k 10-core (6+4), 32GB DDR4 3200 MHz, RTX 3060 12GB, ADATA XPG 512GB M.2 NVMe SSD, 2 x 1TB WD Black HDD

PC #2: ASUS X299 Prime Deluxe II, i7-7820X 8c/16t, 16GB 2666 MHz DDR4, GTX 1060 3GB, Samsung 970 EVO NVMe M.2 SSD (Win10 Pro), Samsung 860 EVO SATA SSD (Win11 Pro), OWC Aura 512GB NVMe M.2, 2 x 1TB HDD

Mac: 2010 Mac Pro 6 core 3.33 GHz, 32GB 1333 MHz DDR3, AMD RX 5500 XT 8GB, Alpine Ridge Thunderbolt 3 Card, Aquantia 10Gbps AVB card, Dual eSATA PCIe + Stardom 8xHDD Raid Tower
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by TerjeNorway on Tue Apr 02, 2019 4:05 pm
PreSonus Seth wroteI built my X99 machine back in 2016 just for Quantum.

I have a full Quantum 4848 + DP88 rig capable of recording over 100 channels.

Rock solid at 64 samples. I could do 32, but I wouldn't run that many tracks to be safe.

try to put some plugins on like Omnisphere, Kontakt, Ample Sound and you cannot not run it on 64 samples without click and pops. No problem for me cause I freeze the tracks in Ableton then I can work on 64 samples recording live vocals and instruments while hearing the audio "from" the plugins.
So with heavy plugins like Izotope Nectar 3 and Omnisphere not possible to record live without clicks and pops. I think the sweet spot for that is around 3.5 ms overall latency. This is of course not Presonus fault this is due to the limitations of the technology today
If you are using 96 khz sample rate like me, and 64 buffer size we are down to 1.6ms. If you are using 44KHz then you are on 3.45ms which is an absolute minimum to have some heavy plugins on while recording live.

My system
Intel Core i9-10900K Processor
Noctua NH-U12A CPU cooler
Gigabyte Z490 VISION D
Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1TB SSD
Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 3200MHz 64GB
MSI GeForce RTX 3080 Ti Gaming X Trio 12G
StarTech Thunderbolt Cable 2M (TBOLTMM2MW)
StarTech Thunderbolt 3 to Thunderbolt 2 adapter (TBT3TBTADAP)
Neumann TLM 102 microphone
Presonus Quantum
Windows 10, Ableton 11, Cubase 10

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