Apple USB-C to 3.5mm jack "Adapter" and ASIO4ALL Driver (on Windows DAWs)
- KVRian
- 1241 posts since 17 Feb, 2010
Hello,
has anyone ever set-up Apple USB-C to 3.5mm jack "Adapter" with ASIO4ALL Driver on Windows (DAWs)?
How good is its behavior/performance (in a DAW) ?
To be more specific, I would like to know how fine the ASIO4ALL Driver (on Windows) interacts with the Cirrus Logic DAC in Apple USB-C to 3.5mm jack device (24bit/48kHz).
If anyone tried this and wants to share any info he/she would be welcome.
has anyone ever set-up Apple USB-C to 3.5mm jack "Adapter" with ASIO4ALL Driver on Windows (DAWs)?
How good is its behavior/performance (in a DAW) ?
To be more specific, I would like to know how fine the ASIO4ALL Driver (on Windows) interacts with the Cirrus Logic DAC in Apple USB-C to 3.5mm jack device (24bit/48kHz).
If anyone tried this and wants to share any info he/she would be welcome.
- KVRAF
- 16818 posts since 8 Mar, 2005 from Utrecht, Holland
It seems this is a class-compliant USB Audio device, so it basically should just work.
Is it better or worse than whatever headphone jack is built in to a random laptop? Who knows... It surely beats having nothing at all.
Seen it for sale for about the same price as a full fast-food meal and a coffee, so that could be a gamble worth taking.
Asio4All is a hacky solution, but hey... it does great things for the price. So who's complaining?
I think if your DAW supports plain Windows audio (wdm or wasapi) then that's better than asio4all.
Is it better or worse than whatever headphone jack is built in to a random laptop? Who knows... It surely beats having nothing at all.
Seen it for sale for about the same price as a full fast-food meal and a coffee, so that could be a gamble worth taking.
Asio4All is a hacky solution, but hey... it does great things for the price. So who's complaining?
I think if your DAW supports plain Windows audio (wdm or wasapi) then that's better than asio4all.
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- KVRAF
- 8563 posts since 2 Aug, 2005 from Guitar Land, USA
I've used a few usb to 3.5mm interfaces with asio4all, it works great. Stability and latency depends on how powerful your computer is.
I haven't yet tried a usb c one, but they're cheap and expected to be about the same. I have 40 minute songs that I recorded using my old interface and asio4all and it was awesome!
Interfaces are expensive, don't waste your money.
I haven't yet tried a usb c one, but they're cheap and expected to be about the same. I have 40 minute songs that I recorded using my old interface and asio4all and it was awesome!
Interfaces are expensive, don't waste your money.
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 1241 posts since 17 Feb, 2010
Unfortunately since Apple, Microsoft (and others in general) don't consider the old great native 3.5 output "fashion" anymore, you *have to* rely on this nice, tiny external DACs. Also, I hope Apple will release a 24bit-192kHz version of it in the near future.
- KVRAF
- 1950 posts since 17 Jun, 2005
Usually, if one is using a consumer interface with no ASIO drivers, asio4all is better. I'd recommend testing other similar solutions as well, such as https://github.com/dechamps/FlexASIOBertKoor wrote: Tue Nov 07, 2023 8:26 pm Asio4All is a hacky solution, but hey... it does great things for the price. So who's complaining?
I think if your DAW supports plain Windows audio (wdm or wasapi) then that's better than asio4all.
- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 1241 posts since 17 Feb, 2010
Thank you for the FlexASIO link, completely missed it. And it seems better than ASIO4ALL on the paper.
