yes. emu is different. I measured the time offset between both channels. It's zero. Windows xp fully patched. Drivers supplied with the emu.
I used Speclab to record the data. Works ok. I have some other program (Saslab lite) which simply refuses to work with the emu. Understand however that the inputs are symmetric inputs. When you use a jack with tip and ring you have the positive signal at tip and the negative signal (of the same channel!!!) at the ring and common at the large base of the connector. You can feed in an asymmetric signal: connect this to tip (and ground/base of course) and most important because otherwise the SNR is lousy: connect the negative input to ground! You need another connector for the other channel ..... One plugs into L line the other into R line - both are the large 6 mm 'Klinkenstecker' You can control levels of both channels independent of one each other. Test and adjust. Don't touch again :-) And yes: when you feed an asymmetric signal you loose one bit of resolution because you bump against some clipping at half of the full level. Walter
