by Y-my-R » Wed Oct 03, 2018 4:30 am
I'm not the programmer type, so I would't know. But it does seem likely to me, that software that is translating the serial port commands coming over RS232 to Mackie Control Protocol and back, could make possible what the ProBox does, but without the hardware. So, basically a mapping table, that reads one thing, and outputs the (matching) other thing. But that's basically the D8Bridge software that was discontinued some time back... why re-invent the wheel.
...and IMO, that's what you have to be a programmer for - to do exactly this kind of stuff.
I have two ProBox units set up with my dual-d8b configuration and love it! Worth every penny, and Munkustrap did a great service to this community by putting all this work in. He's also unbelievably helpful if you have trouble with the ProBox setup - to a point where I think he puts in more time than he's making money (I had trouble with the meters in Logic, which turned out to be a Logic bug... that you just don't see on a real Mackie Control unit (which I have a couple of), because the meters are sluggish in that slow LCD display on the Mackie Controls).
I did try the HUI mode on the d8b... and yes, it's annoying that it only works on 8 channels. I think that was just an "extra" that was thrown in at the time.
Oh, and I did try my two d8b's with Studio One 4 as controllers. They are all recognized and work fine with the two ProBoxes.
The only thing I couldn't figure out yet, that I was using with Logic and the two d8b's, is how to lock one unit to always control certain channels (I want my left unit, to be statically assigned to VCA's, Busses, Output Level Controls (for outboard gear), and one or two Virtual Instruments). Logic can do that ("Track Lock"), but I couldn't find an equivalent feature in Studio One.
The meters work perfectly in Studio One, though. They're sluggish and unusable in Logic... but again, that's a Logic bug, and if you look closely with a real MCU unit, it behaves the same way.