OMG "sound card" EMPHASES ON THE WORD CARD. that other converter is not a CARD!
again CARD CARD CARD!!!!
It is a card, its just too big to fit on a tiny pci card.
OMG "sound card" EMPHASES ON THE WORD CARD. that other converter is not a CARD!
again CARD CARD CARD!!!!
WOW, what is your definition of the word "card"?
it supports 2.1 but also does virtual 7.1. and i could of sworn i have seen an attachment for the Essence STX than made it true 7.1!
the asus cards also support EAX.
yes it uses PCI-E but you can stick a PCI card in any PCI slot in your computer. i have my STX in my PCIx16 slot. and the stx will play games as good or as better as the creative card. it has a better dynamic range and can power bigger nicer speakers, AND it has a headphone amp which is VERY NICE!
+1 on the headphone amp, always nice to have!
Had a quick flick through and I don't recall you mentioning your mobo.
If it has anything Realtek ALC888/ALC889 and above, for 2.0 you won't see any benefit.
They do handle 5.1 "well" but in my experience, they seem to lack.
I've stuck the depicted Auzen Prelude in my gaming rig. Simple to use, very good at the surround. (nice annoying green flashing led that you won't see in the case)
Anything additional to the onboard would be molesting the sound. Some cards do it better than others. Most do it the same.
Still sporting the Creative Soundworks DTT 5.1 myself, gotta be 20 years old now !!
Actually I'm still using a P45 motherboard. It's a Gigabyte EP45-UD3P. Even with the Creative X-Fi Surround 5.1 USB 2.0 adapter sound card, the overall quality is cleaner. But, unfortunately, I'm still aiming for an audiophile type sound card that will help my speakers balance out all the sounds well. I think the T40 SII's have too deep/muddy of a bass for my taste. Bass should always be proportional/tight, crisp, and very clear.
Aren't Auzentech sound cards using the same manufacturing as Creative cards? I mean they do have much better driver support as opposed to Creative drivers. I've never tried Auzentech products, so I wouldn't know how they compare with Creative. My friends use Auzentech because they say it's 'bang for the buck.'
I'm using the Creative USB sound card now since it was given to me as a present....Why waste it?![]()
Wow, never thought my post would get so many replies. I just thought after awhile seeing no response I kind of gave up....haha.
Yup, I'll have to think about the Asus Xonar Essence STX. I'm using a Creative X-Fi Surround 5.1 USB 2.0 sound card. It does bring a bit better sound quality than the onboard sound. I think my speakers have too much bass even after turning the bass to 0 and treble to 10. It still feels muddy.
Maybe investing in a really high quality sound card like the Asus Xonar Essence will be a major improvement? What does everyone think?![]()
Hey,
You will not hear a massive difference changing sound card. I would get a good set of speakers first. Then worry about audio conversion quality later.
Your much better off running a pair of £20,000 speakers with on board sound than £20 with a £3000 sound card.
Cheers,
Sam
Thats not entirely true. It doesn't take a very expensive system to make a sound card sound like crap. I had the PCI Express Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium and i have a Klipsch Pro Media 2.1 sound system. sounded alright but then i bought the STX and there was a HUGE difference in sound quality, and my pro media was only about $150. If you are going for a $20,000+ sound system (Which i happen to have) you are going to have to go with something better than the little STX sound card.![]()
Thats not entirely true. It doesn't take a very expensive system to make a sound card sound like crap. I had the PCI Express Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium and i have a Klipsch Pro Media 2.1 sound system. sounded alright but then i bought the STX and there was a HUGE difference in sound quality, and my pro media was only about $150. If you are going for a $20,000+ sound system (Which i happen to have) you are going to have to go with something better than the little STX sound card.![]()
I would agree to do 5.1 well a better sound card might be worth it. But for a 2.0 or 2.1 setup the vast majority of the sound quality is going to come from the speakers themselves. I seriously doubt most listeners can blindfold test here a difference between one sound card and another. However, a different set of speakers will make much more of an impact.
For my PC I run the audio down the HDMI output on the 6970 into my monitor then out on a pair of phonos into my ADAM A7's. Yes it doesn't sound as good as when I'm playing audio from my Mac via my MOTU 896MkIII but it does still sound really good and I'm pretty sure most people would not hear the difference between the PC and the Mac input.
So yeah... just get a card that has good driver support, the outputs you want and that is 'clean' sounding rather than coloured or 'hyped up'.
A decent pair of smaller speakers are ADAM A3X's. For the price and size they are the best I have heard. KRK V4s are also pretty good. Depends on what sound you like really.
Sound cards... These are meant to be good http://www.emu.com/p...91&product=9872
They will do you 192KHz/24bit.
Also.. what are you listening TO? If it's 192Kbps MP3's and you think MP3's sound fine then there is no point buying posh sound gear ^^
Sam
i recommend getting a pair of these http://www.klipsch.c...llite-overview/ with a nice sub. the speakers alone are only $200 fir the pair, a nice sub is about $400. $600 may be out of your price range but is a GREAT little audiophile set up! also as i said earlier you can go with the klipsch pro media 2.1, its only $150 and sounds AMAZING!
My pc speaker setup is http://www.klipsch.c...wb-14-overview/
http://www.klipsch.c...ub-12-overview/
How big is the room your listening in? If you only have room for a 2.0 setup then im not guessing very big? If so it's best to not go for big speakers so the A3X's would be a perfect fit for a small/medium room. I wouldn't recommend adding big LF drivers as LF's play havoc in small rooms. Try not to sit in the middle of your room and don't place the speakers too near to a wall for best bass response without treatment. Also try to get your tweeters just above ear level. Listening environment is as important as your speakers themselves as you dont only hear the sound of the speakers but the sound of the sound bouncing off all the surfaces in your room.