Antelope Orion 32 + Gen 3 is a multi-channel audio interface. It offers a multitude of channels both analogue and digital in various formats. That is, it covers most of the needs for both live and studio use.
I use this product mainly live, dealing with classical music recordings, which involve the simultaneous use of many microphones.
There are many pros to list, but also some flaws to be reported and improvements to suggest.
The sound is excellent, very detailed and beautifully placed spatially.
The conversion is very linear. The latency is reduced to practically zero, and delays are not appreciable.
Furthermore the interface has a really versatile control software, which allows a very diversified use.
It would be too long to explain in detail all the possibilities offered by the software, which are really many. The only drawback is the technical support for the use of the software itself. The tutorial is unclear, the manual practically non-existent, so much so that the software appears to be an inextricable tangle of little use. Instead it is really useful, well done, and effective. You can connect every point in the matrix with whatever else, send it to the DAW, and much more. It is possible to have multiple configurations, which can be recalled not only by software, but also from the physical interface panel. it can be used to connect different software together, so that the output of one of them becomes the input of another one.
It is a pity that both the inputs and outputs are not currently visible on the display, and indeed without the software the operation of switching between displaying the in and outs it is very cumbersome.
And it should be noted a very dangerous characteristic of the machine: the power button, only if touched for a very short time, turns the unit off. For live uses I recommend making a cover with a plastic bottle cap to avoid accidental bumping it. Too bad, however, that the same key gives access to an important menu if pressed for a long time. Frankly I would have preferred the operation to be opposite, that is, that the menu appeared with a simple pressure, and the switching off with a prolonged pressure; and I gave this suggestion to Antelope. We'll see if they know how to welcome it. To conclude: despite the indications of the House that require a Mac at least born in 2012 and with the Sierra system, it works very well also with the Mac of 2010 and OS El Capitain.
In short: it's really a very good investment.