Lewitt Connect 6 — Editorial Review
The Lewitt Connect 6 is a USB-C audio interface aimed squarely at content creators — a 2-in/2-out box with high-gain preamps, onboard DSP, and the unusual ability to bridge a computer and a phone at the same time.
Featured Video Review
Dual-device bridging and creator-focused DSP
Sound on Sound and MusicTech note it carries two low-noise mic preamps with around 72 dB of gain (-133 dBV EIN), three USB-C ports — one for the computer, one for a phone/tablet/second computer, and one for power that also charges the connected mobile device — plus loopback for streaming and built-in compressor, expander, EQ and maximiser. Internal routing is flexible enough to cover podcasting, streaming and music recording from one bus-powered unit. In Julian Krause's measurement-focused review and test — featured above — the preamps and converters are bench-tested for real audio performance.
Honest cons
- 24-bit/96 kHz ceiling. Plenty for spoken word and most music, but it doesn't reach 192 kHz.
- Software-driven routing. The flexibility lives in the control app — there's a learning curve versus a knob-per-function box.
- Only two mic inputs. Fine for a host-plus-guest setup, not for tracking a band.
- Touch-style controls take adjustment. The minimalist top panel is less tactile than physical pots.
Where this interface fits
- Podcasters and streamers who want onboard processing and clean preamps in one portable unit.
- Creators recording across a computer and a phone simultaneously — its standout trick.
- Bus-powered mobile setups that still need real DSP and loopback.
- Not multi-mic band tracking, a 192 kHz mastering chain, or a purely knob-driven workflow.
Sources & Citations
- Sound on Sound, "Lewitt Connect 6," soundonsound.com (accessed 2026-05-26)
- MusicTech, "Lewitt Connect 6 review," musictech.com (accessed 2026-05-26)
Last verified: 2026-05-26
