

No need for AISO4ALL and native drivers tend to have better performance than AISO4ALL. Since you have a 204 serial mixer, you can run it with native aggregation if you want. I run the mackie ASIO drivers on my windows 10 machine/003 serial 1640i. it could have something to do with the serial number of your unit, it's possible that after a certain date of manufacture units will run as you suggest, but ones made before that won't I've heard rumors to that effect, too.Īs far as I know, ASIO4ALL would only be needed if you were trying to run aggregate 003 serial firewire mixers (same as trying to run any aggregate audio devices in windows that do not have native support). That said, I would love to believe you, cause I don't care what else is out there, that interface is all I'd ever want. I'd love to believe that all it takes to use the Mackie Onyx Blackbird under Win 10 is loading the last driver and running under Windows compatibility mode, but to the best of my knowledge, that has hardly been everyone's experience. I grabbed the Blackbird Control v4.1 GUI v1.1.0 driver from Mackie's Onyx Driver Matrix linked as "PC V4.1." This appears to cover Onyx-i, Firewire Option Card, Blackbird, Blackjack and Satellite models in case other users might find this helpful.Uh, I would find that a lot more than helpful, I would find that thrilling! However, maybe you could report back in a week or so to see if any gremlins appear? After installing the drivers (in Windows 7 Compatibility to be sure) and a reboot, the Blackbird seems to be running perfectly. I remembered that the Blackbird had it's own driver/mixer/controller - see link below. My machine recognized all the hardware but was unable to have any signal flow. I installed the PCIe card, the universal drivers and connected the Blackbird.

Thanks for everybody contributing to this awesome trove of knowledge! After picking up a PCIe firewire card for $20, I'm up and running with an Onyx Blackbird.
