Has anyone succeeded in connecting Rig Manager on a Mac to the Player through a USB hub?
How about using the Player as an audio interface to a DAW through a USB hub?
Thanks in advance!
Has anyone succeeded in connecting Rig Manager on a Mac to the Player through a USB hub?
How about using the Player as an audio interface to a DAW through a USB hub?
Thanks in advance!
I use a thundebolt 4 dock which works pretty fine with logic as DAW.
I did a bit of research on the Access Virus site, which may be highly relevant because it’s also a Kemper line. I also own a Virus TI2 and need to arrange the USB network in a rack I’m building.
It seems the key is that a hub follows the USB 2.0 “MTT” standard. Unfortunately, it is difficult to know if a given hub or switch meets the MTT spec or is only STT compatible.
If anyone is curious (can’t imagine many will be), here’s some info:
On Mac and Windows, check your hub as follows:
On MacOS, it is possible to install lsusb
command line tool which was back-ported to MacOS long time ago via macports
or homebrew
install systems: sudo port install usbutils
. Once installed, the steps are:
The hub type can be checked with lsusb
command. TT information is provided in bDeviceProtocol
field of the device descriptor of the hub in the question. Alternatively, one can run lsusb -v | grep TT
or lsusb -v | grep bDeviceProtocol
for the list of the bDeviceProtocol
fields for all connected devices.
On Windows, you can check if your hub has this feature using the Windows Device Manager. Look for the words "Hub has multiple TTs" in the Advanced tab:
Maybe not Player, but Kemper Head, not Mac, but Windows - I am using Kemper hooked to TP-LINK UH720 active hub without hassles.