Hello everyone,
the M-audio transit, http://www.m-audio.com/products/en_us/Transit-main-1.html is a 24/96khz adc. dac and digital i/o box
Has anyone got one they can take an internal picture of? I'm hoping it is not one FPGA, etc, so I can tap into the i2s data lines.
It would make a great 24/96 reciever for a dac, (and tx for a adc) if one could tap into the i2s lines. here's hoping
Regards,
Mark Hathaway
the M-audio transit, http://www.m-audio.com/products/en_us/Transit-main-1.html is a 24/96khz adc. dac and digital i/o box
Has anyone got one they can take an internal picture of? I'm hoping it is not one FPGA, etc, so I can tap into the i2s data lines.
It would make a great 24/96 reciever for a dac, (and tx for a adc) if one could tap into the i2s lines. here's hoping
Regards,
Mark Hathaway
Thank you sheldon
You have given me all the info i needed, indeed the transit is perfect for adding to a dac.
The tas1020a is texas instruments usb audio i/o chip. The ak4584 is a dac and adc one chip with spdif i/o.
All one has to do is tap into the i2s between the two chips and they have a usb reciever perfect for replacing the spdif/aes reciever. Beats trying to program the tas1020a from scratch.
Thanks for the help Sheldon,
time to head to ebay,
Mark
You have given me all the info i needed, indeed the transit is perfect for adding to a dac.
The tas1020a is texas instruments usb audio i/o chip. The ak4584 is a dac and adc one chip with spdif i/o.
All one has to do is tap into the i2s between the two chips and they have a usb reciever perfect for replacing the spdif/aes reciever. Beats trying to program the tas1020a from scratch.
Thanks for the help Sheldon,
time to head to ebay,
Mark