Pricing and availability

We compare 600+ stores and found this item at 4 stores. Prices updated .

Average Price: $566

High-end/Boutique

$150

$501+

Price Tier

Budget

Standard

High-end

Price History

Based on price data from 3 merchants for "RME 9652". Prices shown reflect NEW condition. Tracking began Apr 2, 2026.

* Product prices and availability are updated by Equipboard every 24hrs and are subject to change. Equipboard may receive compensation for purchases made at participating retailers linked on this site. This compensation does not affect what products or prices are displayed, or the order of prices listed. For more information, please refer to our affiliate disclosure.

Description

Unleash your studio's full potential with the RME 9652, an audio interface that redefines versatility and performance for both novice and professional musicians alike. A proud successor to the iconic Project Hammerfall, this powerhouse boasts a comprehensive range of I/O options, integrating seamlessly into any recording environment. The Secure BIOS Technology ensures worry-free updates, while the Zero CPU Load feature delivers ultra-low latency, keeping your sessions smooth and responsive.

Designed for the modern musician, the RME 9652 doesn't just stop at incredible tech specs. With three ADAT optical I/Os, you're equipped to handle multiple audio sources with ease, and the inclusion of 2 MIDI I/Os opens up a world of creative possibilities for your MIDI devices. Its TotalMix DSP-based mixer/router provides unparalleled control, allowing you to craft the perfect sound with real-time precision.

Whether you're expanding your existing setup or building your dream studio from the ground up, the RME 9652 offers the flexibility to grow with you. Its support for Expansion Boards means you can tailor your system to fit your specific needs, offering a future-proof solution that ensures your gear evolves as your creativity does.

Key Features:

  • 3 x ADAT digital I/O with RME's Bitclock PLL technology
  • 1 x SPDIF digital I/O with DIGI96 technology
  • 1 x Word clock I/O (BNC) via expansion board
  • 2 x MIDI I/O for 32 channels of high-speed MIDI
  • TotalMix DSP-based real-time mixer/router
  • S/MUX support for 12 channels at 96 kHz/24 bit (ADAT optical)

Owner's manual

RME 9652 User Manual

Product specs

Brand RME
Model HDSP 9652 PCI Digital Audio Card
Finish Standard
Year 2010s
Made In Germany
Categories Audio Interfaces
Bit Depth 24-bit
Compatibility Windows, macOS
Computer Connectivity PCI
Digital Input Format ADAT/Optical, S/PIDF
Digital Output Format ADAT/Optical, S/PIDF
Electronics Digital
Format Modular
Number of Analog Inputs 0
Number of Analog Outputs 0
Number of Channels 56
Number of Digital Inputs 26
Number of Digital Outputs 26
Number of Headphone Outputs 0
Number of MIDI Inputs 2
Number of MIDI Outputs 2
Number of Mic Preamps 0
Sample Rate 96 khz
Simultaneous I/O 26 x 26

FAQs

What type of connectivity does the RME HDSP 9652 PCI Card offer?

The RME HDSP 9652 PCI Card provides PCI connectivity for computers and supports digital input and output formats including ADAT/Optical and S/PIDF.

How many channels does the RME HDSP 9652 support?

The RME HDSP 9652 supports 56 channels, with 26 digital inputs and 26 digital outputs.

Is the RME HDSP 9652 compatible with both Windows and macOS?

Yes, the RME HDSP 9652 is compatible with both Windows and macOS operating systems.

Does the RME HDSP 9652 include any analog inputs or outputs?

No, the RME HDSP 9652 does not include any analog inputs or outputs; it is a digital-only interface.

Can the RME HDSP 9652 handle MIDI connections?

Yes, the RME HDSP 9652 features 2 MIDI inputs and 2 MIDI outputs for comprehensive MIDI connectivity.

What is the maximum sample rate supported by the RME HDSP 9652?

The RME HDSP 9652 supports a maximum sample rate of 96 kHz for high-quality digital audio processing.

Does the RME HDSP 9652 require an external power supply?

No, the RME HDSP 9652 is powered via the PCI slot in your computer, eliminating the need for an external power supply.

Reviews

PROS

  • Clear, high-quality audio without pops, cracks, or skips

  • Supports up to 52 channels with 96kHz sampling rates

  • ASIO zero CPU load technology for efficient operation

  • Intelligent Clock Control for stable synchronization

  • Includes MIDI I/O ports for comprehensive connectivity

  • Compatible with a wide range of operating systems

  • Total Mix feature for flexible routing and mixing

  • Secure BIOS Technology protects against firmware update issues

  • Continuous product support and driver updates from RME

  • Expansion options available for customizing I/O configurations

CONS

  • Initial setup and routing can be confusing and unintuitive

  • Manual and support resources may not be beginner-friendly

  • Firmware update process may be incompatible with certain motherboards

  • No built-in DSP chips, relies on FPGA for DSP functions

  • Lacks a headphone output for direct monitoring

Critic Reviews

RME Hammerfall DSP 9652

soundonsound.com

The RME Hammerfall DSP 9652 soundcard is a powerhouse, boasting extensive connectivity and advanced monitoring capabilities that make it a top choice for professionals. With support for up to 52 channels and ASIO zero CPU load technology, it excels in performance and versatility. However, the lack of a headphone output and delayed Mac support may frustrate some users. Despite these drawbacks, the HDSP 9652’s reliability and feature-rich design maintain RME's reputation as a leader in audio interfaces, delivering solid performance for those serious about sound.

positive

RME Digi 9652 Project Hammerfall

soundonsound.com

RME’s Digi 9652 Project Hammerfall soundcard is a powerhouse for digital audio, offering unmatched value with its extensive I/O capabilities and low-latency ASIO drivers. It excels in providing sample-accurate synchronization and enhanced zero-latency monitoring, making it a top choice for those looking to expand their studio's digital capabilities. However, it falls short with no support for Windows 95 and lacks some essential drivers at launch, particularly for Mac users. While it shines in performance, the absence of analogue I/O may be a dealbreaker for some. Overall, it’s a versatile and impressive interface worthy of consideration for serious producers.

positive

5.0 out of 5

Based on 1 Review and 1 Rating

5 star
4 star
3 star
2 star
1 star
efraimidis_vassilis

RME HDSP 9652 PCI card / 3 x ADAT Digital I/O / 1 x SPDIF Digital In / Out 2 x Midi I / O 1 x Wordclock I/O

Feature Perfect

As in the original Hammerfall, the 9652 product number refers to the fact that the card supports sampling rates up to 96kHz and audio inputs and outputs for up to 52 channels — 26 inputs and 26 outputs, from three ADAT I/O pairs and co-axial S/PDIF I/O. Each ADAT channel supports 48kHz/24-bit operation, and S/MUX mode is also available to pair ADAT channels in order to provide 12 96kHz/24-bit channels instead. Like its predecessor, the HDSP 9652 also implements what RME refer to as 'ASIO zero CPU load' technology, meaning that you can have 52-channel operation without placing any burden on the host processor.

An ADAT 9-pin sync connection is also available for sample-accurate transfers (with a suitable ASIO 2-compliant application, such as Cubase), and BNC word clock I/O connections are still provided. On the subject of clocking, the DSP 9652 card excels at keeping you aware of the clock status of your audio and sync ports via the Sync Check area of the control panel window, and thanks to RME's Intelligent Clock Control technology, the card can automatically sync to the port supplying the most stable clock signal — very handy.

Co-axial S/PDIF I/O is supplied on the same breakout cable as the ADAT 9-pin connection, and you can assign the first pair of ADAT ports to transmit or receive S/PDIF via optical connections instead. As existing Hammerfall users know, it's also possible to set this so the first ADAT output transmits S/PDIF and the first ADAT input still receives ADAT data, or vice versa, which is rather neat.

The original Hammerfall was purely an audio card, but the HDSP 9652 adds two pairs of MIDI ports for 32 MIDI input and output channels via another supplied breakout cable. This is a perfect touch since there are few situations where audio workstations don't require MIDI ports — even if you never use MIDI instruments, hardware control surfaces such as Mackie Control still connect over MIDI.

Although the HDSP 9652 uses one PCI slot in your computer, many of the connections are supplied on a separate expansion card that needs to be fitted in an additional backplate, in the place of another PCI card. And if you find the I/O options of the DSP 9652 not to your liking, a range of analogue and TDIF expansion boards are available separately (see The Hammerfall DSP Family box for more information), and you can fit a second HDSP 9652 card to the same system to double the number of available inputs and outputs. The only extra I/O-related feature I'd perhaps like to see on the HDSP 9652 card is a headphone output, which is present on every other Hammerfall DSP product (see the Family box), even if it just mirrored a digital output pair for test and monitoring situations.

Who's Gonna Drive Your Card?

The HDSP 9652 is compatible with pretty much every major operating system: for Windows users there are multi-client MME drivers, ASIO 2 and GSIF (for Gigastudio) drivers on Windows 98/ME, and full multi-client MME, ASIO and GSIF drivers for Windows 2000/XP users. The multi-client ASIO drivers in this latter set, which RME added during the course of the review, deserves a special mention since they make it possible for two ASIO-compatible applications to be loaded and use the s

ame soundcard and drivers simultaneously, so long as both applications are using different channels. This makes it possible to use Cubase and Wavelab at the same time via ASIO, or even Cubase and Nuendo, for example; and this new multi-client support will have engineers salivating when they see it's now possible to run RME's highly regarded Digicheck analysis software alongside an ASIO application, as described in the Digicheck box below.

Mac users are catered for as well, with ASIO 2 and OMS drivers for Mac OS 9, and Core Audio support under Mac OS X. However, Mac users won't benefit from any multi-client functionality, and, unfortunately, there are no Core MIDI drivers for OS X users to make use of the MIDI ports at present.

Hammer To Fall RME have always been pretty good at supporting their products with driver updates, and the HDSP 9652 card is no exception. During the review, for example, I needed to update the drivers to try out some of the latest features, and in order to use the newer drivers, it was also necessary to update the firmware on the HDSP 9652 card itself. However, I got nothing but errors when I tried to use the firmware update program downloaded from RME's web site, which worried me that the

firmware update process might have damaged the card, or that it was faulty in the first place. Fortunately, the HDSP 9652 card features what RME describe as Secure BIOS Technology, which prevents the card from being damaged if there's a problem when updating the firmware. This works by providing a second, read-only BIOS on the card that's automatically activated if the firmware upgrade fails, enabling you to check your system and redo the flash update.

After emailing RME's Matthias Carstens, my problem was quickly identified. Apparently, the update procedure for the FPGAs (Field-Programmable Gate Arrays) from Xilinx that RME use on the Hammerfall DSP card is incompatible with certain motherboards, and the only solution if the user encounters a problem when updating the firmware is to put the card in another computer. RME are working to improve the situation, and it should be stressed that it's not the HDSP 9652 card itself that's incompatible with certain motherboards, only the firmware update process. Once the firmware has been upgraded, you can move the card back to the first computer and it should work fine.

The motherboard I was using that caused the problems was an Asus AV7M266, a Socket A motherboard featuring an AMD 761 chipset. I tried putting the card in a similar Athlon-based system with an Asus A7S333 motherboard, which has a SiS 745 chipset, and this time the firmware update process worked perfectly. I shouldn't imagine this will be a problem when using the card in a Power Mac, but if you have an incompatible Windows-based system and no additional machine to perform the firmware upgrade, you can send the card to your friendly RME distributor to do it for you.

The Hammerfall DSP Family
If the all-digital nature of the HDSP 9652 card doesn't suit you, RME offer the EXB range of expansion boards, including the AEB4I, AEB8I, AEB4O and AEB8O, which offer four or eight analogue inputs or outputs, and the TEB TDIF board. The HDSP 9652 supports two EXB boards, which connect to the main card via a ribbon cable and require an additional backplate in your computer, with any combination supported, including two of the same type. It's worth emphasising that these expansions don't offer additional channels, though, just alternative ways of getting audio into and out of the soundcard from the ADAT connections. If the HDSP 9652 still doesn't sound like the card for you, RME's HDSP 9632 might be more appropriate where Total Mix is still desirable, but a smaller number of channels is required. It features a single pair of ADAT I/O ports, co-axial S/PDIF, a balanced stereo analogue input and output, a single pair of MIDI I/O connections, and a headphone output for monitoring that mirrors the other analogue output. Alternatively, there's the forthcoming HDSP MADI, which will be Windows-only initially, offering a pair of MADI connections for 64 inputs and 64 outputs via optical or co-axial connections, with two pairs of MIDI I/O, word clock I/O, and a stereo analogue output for monitoring. While MADI is usually only found on high-end professional equipment, RME have also recently announced the ADI648 converter box, featuring eight pairs of ADAT I/O to a MADI pair. And, finally, there's the original Hammerfall DSP Multiface and Digiface systems as mentioned at the start of the review.

DSP Without DSP The DSP appendage to the Hammerfall name refers to the card's ability to carry out certain DSP functions such setting up monitor mixes. Oddly, however, it turns out that the HDSP 9652 doesn't actually have any DSP chips on board; instead, RME provide hardware DSP functions using FPGAs, as mentioned earlier.

A Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) can be thought of as a reprogrammable processor, where the behaviour of the logic elements can be configured by the designer at any time, even via a downloadable update from the user's computer. So instead of using an off-the-shelf DSP chip or having custom chips manufactured, RME have used an FPGA to provide the specific behaviour required for the DSP functionality the company wants to implement. This means that later, rather than being limited by the fixed behaviour of a DSP chip, RME can simply update the FPGA if its design needs to be changed to accommodate additional functionality.

One of the big questions asked by new users of audio workstations is whether they need an additional mixing console, and while my personal response is always an emphatic 'no', there are certain tasks, such as setting up monitoring, that are often made easier by adding a digital mixer when recording groups of musicians in a studio. However, to overcome the need for an additional mixer for monitoring duties, the Hammerfall DSP series of products all offer Total Mix, which provides complete control over the input, playback and output channels of your workstation.

The second version of Steinberg's ASIO driver API technology introduced a technology called ASIO Direct Monitoring, which allowed the soundcard to route an incoming signal directly to an output, rather than having it pass through the ASIO host application, such as Cubase, and incur a latency that would make it difficult for the musician to play along with the rest of the song. Total Mix basically takes the concept of ASIO Direct Monitoring many steps further by letting the user decide which inputs and playback channels are mixed to which outputs, and all of this happens independently of your ASIO host application, without affecting the way it's set up to record the incoming signals or play back the outgoing signals.

As a simple example of how Total Mix can be useful, say you're recording a guitarist in your live room and you want to give them a different monitor mix to the one you're hearing in the control room. The guitarist's headphones can be connected to a different output pair to the control room, and using Total Mix you can route the input from the guitarist to both monitor mixes on the different output pairs simultaneously. Now, say the guitarist wants to hear more of himself than the playback (for example!), and the engineer wants to hear a balanced level of both the playback and the guitarist — no problem with Total Mix. Simply turn the playback level down on the playback channels routed to the guitarist, and turn the guitarist's input down on the engineer's monitor mix. To finish, the guitarist's mix might be overloading, so you can simply turn the output channels down on that monitor mix.

It's a simple example, I know, and one that's really quite easy when a separate mixer is used with your audio workstation — but that's the point: Total Mix facilitates this type of situation without the user needing a hardware mixer. And as I mentioned before, Total Mix works independently of your ASIO host, so the guitar would still come in on the same input channels at unity gain from your software's perspective, regardless of the routing and levels in Total Mix.

To give you some idea of Total Mix's power, any input and playback channel can be routed to any number of output channels, with each routing having its own independent level setting. This means, to quote the figures on RME's web site, with the 26 input and 26 playback channels being mixed to the 26 output channels, the mixer must be able to do the sums for (26+26) x 26 = 1352 channels simultaneously, which is rather impressive.

Conclusion As I mentioned at the start of this review, I've been a fan of RME's products and technology for several years now — the attention to detail in every aspect of development is exceptional. Having experienced nothing but rock-solid performance from any audio workstation I've used with an RME soundcard, these products are usually what I recommend if no additional features are required along the lines of Creamware's SCOPE cards, for example. Trust isn't always something you have can have with a product or manufacturer, especially in the technology market, but I trust RME and the HDSP 9652 maintains their tradition of great, yet affordable technology.

information infop.gif £399 including VAT. infot.gif Synthax Audio UK +44 (0)1664 410600. infow.gifwww.rme-audio.com Test Spec Asus A7S333 motherboard with Athlon XP1800 processor, 1GB DDR (PC2100) memory and an ATi Radeon 7500 64MB dual-head graphics card, running Windows XP Professional. Published July 2003

SOUND ON SOUND

Artist usage

Add artist
See how Harry Gregson-Williams uses RME 9652

Harry Gregson-Williams

Composer, Music Producer

Kind Heaven Orchestra

...
Verified via Soundonsound

Harry Gregson-Williams's LA studio complex, Wavecrest Music, commenced operations in Venice Beach in August 2003, and comprises three floors of editing suites, mix rooms and a live room, as well as Harry's own studio on the top level. This houses the following gear:

Sequencing and digital audio

*Steinberg Cubase SX and Ableton Live running on dual 3.6GHz Xeon server with 4GB RAM, two RME HD*SP 9652 soundcards, 75GB mirrored SATA system drives and 400GB mirrored SATA audio/sample storage drives. MIDI is streamed over LAN to Gigastudio PCs, and an Emagic Unitor 8 and AMT8 are used for hardware synths. *Pro Tools HD Accel system running on dual 2GHz Apple G5, with one 192 Analog and seven 192 Digital interfaces. Samplers

*14x Emu E4X. *24x Roland S760. *7x 3.0GHz Pentium 4 PCs with 80GB SATA system drives, RME HDSP 9652 soundcards and 250GB SATA sound drives with custom and commercial sound libraries, running Tascam Gigastudio 3.

Software synths and plug-ins

*Arturia ARP 2600, Minimoog V and CS80. *Antares Filter and Auto-Tune. *Applied Acoustics Lounge Lizard. *Gmedia Imposcar and Oddity. *GRM Tools. *Korg Legacy Collection. *Native Instruments Absynth 3, Battery 2, FM7, Kontakt 2, Pro 53, Reaktor 4. *Ohm Force Ohm Boyz. *Spectrasonics Stylus RMX, Atmosphere and Trilogy. *Steinberg D'Cota, X-Phraze, Virtual Guitarist, VG Electric Edition, Groove Agent and Halion.

Hardware synths

*Access Virus, Indigo 2 and Redback. *Clavia Nord Rack, Nord 3 KB and Nord Modular. *Korg Trinity Pro X, Wavestation A/D and M1R. *Novation Supernova II Pro. *Roland JP8080, JD990, JV1080 and MKS80. *Studio Electronics SE1, ATC1 and Omega 8. *Waldorf Q, Microwave II, Microwave XT and Pulse.

Recording, mixing & outboard

*Avalon 727 preamp. *Eventide DSP4000 effects. *Lexicon PCM80 and 90 reverbs. *Quested HQ108 speakers in 5.1 setup. *5x Yamaha 02R digital mixers.

Used With

Based on how musicians on Equipboard use RME 9652, it is most commonly used with the following gear.

More RME Audio Interfaces

RME UCX

$621.13 - $2,099.00

 
Tycho Technasia
2 artists using
RME ADI-2 Pro

$1,315.75 - $1,999.00

 
Mike Bello
1 artist using

Accessories & Related Items

Community setups

Similar

Gear Guides