I figured as much on issues regarding the latency/load balance. I suppose I'll need to try a few things with the Open Labs DBeat under load, to see how things bear out.
And of course - to keep context, as far as keeping things "close to the metal" on latency, one of the primary processors I'll be running are two instances of Guitar Rig - one for bass and one for the guitar side of the Mobius Megatar. That's not to say that they'll both be running at the same time - all the time - but they will be resident and available on each set. Depending on how the DBeat holds up, I may set up some triggers in the Riff app to turn processing ON and OFF depending on which one I'm using for a particular song.
Secondly, there will be a synth like XPhraze running in "Xmode" triggering patterns and phrases, with Ableton Live and FLStudio's Deckadance thrown into the mix running loops and tracks. Again, they all may not be running simultaneously, but it's not out of the question, either.
These of course don't need to have realtime latency like Guitar Rig, but of course it does go to overall load. For the most part I plan to use Live for driving loops of material developed on my main DAW in Cubase/Nuendo, so the possibility of adding load by doing heavy realtime DSP processing in Live is minimal (maybe some accents for beginnings/endings of sets).
So for now I think I need to do a bit of work on my side to see what's plausible within the processing power of the DBeat. If it comes down to driver strain on the embedded PreSonus FireBox, I *can* take my RME Fireface 400 from my desktop DAW and connect it to the DBeat to see how that fares. The RME drivers are crazy efficient and might give me the freedom to do what I want - as long as it fits within the overall CPU capabilities of the machine.
I'll give it a try this weekend and see how things go. There are several places that the DBeat displays CPU load (aside from what Bidule displays), but I'm not sure how much any of those metrics can be trusted. That, too will be part of the discovery process.