Hi @Radomir_Laucik which separate audio interface have you bought?
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Hi @loois
I use ZOOM UAC-232.
Zoom has a strong reputation for their top quality DACs, although more for recording, but I believe they maintain the same quality on the output side. The difference in e.g. club sound system is huge,
Note it has strong disadvantage for DJing - only a single separate output. So you can’t split cue in headphones this way.
Since I use it with FLX4, I “hack” it using audio device aggregation in MacOS, so they act like a single audio device, so I can use the main output from Zoom and headphones from FLX4.
Unfortunately, it’s not that reliable. When I disconnect those devices, it often breaks and I need to recreate the aggregated device. A bit annoying, especially doing it every time before gig, because I want to be sure it works.
This is why I can’t directly recommend it, especially if not using MacOS, since this is a system option not commonly available elsewhere.
Ah I see. Since I use Djay on my ipad pro, this won’t work for me then.
Did anybody on the forum already shared a good / the best soundcard to be used with an ipad, having precueing as well..?
Thanks for your fast reply @Radomir_Laucik ! ![]()
Hi @loois, you might want to check out the Reloop Flux. Several users have reported that it works on iOS as long as you disable Bluetooth on your iOS device.
Were RME Babyface Pro FS and Motu Ultralight MK5 included in this A/B testing? How did they perform?
I spent a week obsessively reading audio interface manuals and trying to understand all the specs. In the end, those two interfaces seemed the most promising.
Both are in the same price range as the Reloop Mixtour Pro. Both have at least +19 dBu master output, which is louder than the Mixtour. Babyface is smaller than the Mixtour and bus-powered. Motu Ultralight MK5 requires a power plug but offers tons of DSP and routing, like parametric EQ on everything, plus gate/EQ/compressor on microphone inputs and dedicated submix for monitors.
Thoughts?