Hi Reuben and all, Thanks for your I hope you don't mind me posting this back to the list! I'm sorry for spamming you with my reply earlier - I was trying to send it to the list... Anyway, I've also added some extra text this time round... On Mon, 2007-09-17 at 14:09 -0500, Reuben Martin wrote: > I have the DIGI 96/8 PAD and it works fine. There are only a few > period sizes that work since the buffer sizes on this device are > fixed. Ok. That's kind of what I expected, from what Fernando said. > If you have it working, but get an absurd number of XRUNs when > starting Jack, it probably means you have a digital input selected, > but no actual digital devices connected. It's trying to sync with an > external device, but isn't finding a signal. Select an analog input, > or actually connect something to the digital input. I think that this is almost certainly exactly what is happening. At the moment I have my ADC/DACs connected to my Digi9636, and I didn't really consider that syncing would be a problem before I'm actually using the interface. That makes perfect sense, though. I'll test it tomorrow. > If you haven't found it yet, there is a tool for the DIGI 96/8 series > that is part of alsa tools that provides a little interface for > selecting which input you want to use, your clock source, pad > settings, DAC volume, sample rate, etc. Cool! It is called 'rmedigicontrol'. The alsatools website says that 'rmedigicontrol is a control tool for RME Digi32 and RME Digi96 sound cards. It provides a graphical frontend for all the sound card controls and switches.' So, does it also work on my Digi9636? When I run it, it just opens one window which appears to control the 96/8 PAD. Just out of interest, does anyone know a *useful* way that I could sync together two Digi9636 cards and one Digi96/8 PAD? Thanks again, Michael _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/linux-audio-user