> But if you want to take advantage of Jack then you will be doing > more than 10 tracks pretty quickly. That reminds me of a discussion I was having with our guitarist on Tuesday. He said he needed 24 tracks for his solo project, so he'd have to hire a bigger studio because our desk is only 8 buss. I said if four tracks was enough for the Beatles and eight tracks enough for Pink Floyd, then eight inputs on the Delta 1010 would be enough for him. I could tell he wasn't impressed by that. One of the things that really dismays me about some people who want to record music is that they think you need a lot of equipment to get started. Like 24 inputs, or a minimum of 6 mics on a drumkit. I've seen some people spend all their money on a ton of kit, and then fail to record even one complete song. Having taken delivery of all the equipment and put it all together, they are faced with a creative brick wall when they don't know where to start. A friend of mine bought a big 16 channel Soundcraft desk to mix from her keyboard and drum machine. Someone had told her that was the one she needed. I helped her set it up, but I think she just took one look at the about 200 knobs and faders and her heart was no longer in the project. We set up Cubase to control the keyboard, and created a drum and bass track. It didn't sound 'professional' like she expected it would with all the professional equipment around her, and I don't think she ever used any of it again. Cheers Daniel