Picked up a couple of SoundBlasters
This last week I picked up a couple of SoundBlaster cards very cheaply, an Audigy and the more recent gold-plated X-Fi XtremeMusic.
I haven't decided what machines to toss them into yet. The last dedicated sound card I ever owned during its prime was a SB Live! back in 2002. Since then, I've just resorted to the usual Realtek integrated sound like most people and as years have gone have generally lost touch with audio hardware.
Just interested to know if anyone else has one of these or used to, what they thought of them, and whether the X-Fi would be worth using in my main desktop which is an aging Sandy Bridge i5-2500K that has PCI available.
I'm not sure what sort of success/benefit would be had under Windows 10 with newer games such as supporting EAX 5.0?
I remember EAX back in the Live! series and it made a hell of a difference to games back then, but these days I'm not so sure.
I haven't decided what machines to toss them into yet. The last dedicated sound card I ever owned during its prime was a SB Live! back in 2002. Since then, I've just resorted to the usual Realtek integrated sound like most people and as years have gone have generally lost touch with audio hardware.
Just interested to know if anyone else has one of these or used to, what they thought of them, and whether the X-Fi would be worth using in my main desktop which is an aging Sandy Bridge i5-2500K that has PCI available.
I'm not sure what sort of success/benefit would be had under Windows 10 with newer games such as supporting EAX 5.0?
I remember EAX back in the Live! series and it made a hell of a difference to games back then, but these days I'm not so sure.
Comments
Initially when I saw this thread, I thought you might have found some ISA sound card.
I have a couple of ISA cards already, best one is an AWE64 Gold in my Pentium 200 PC. A couple of other ISA cards I just have as spares but they're basically no frills CrystalAudio and some other branded card I can't recall right now.
I've been told that the best solution is to use HDMI to an external amplifier.
Any ideas on what it's worth?
Off hand I'd say perhaps $30-40 as a reasonable price. Keep in mind there are several different models of AWE32 and I'm not sure off hand if one is more desirable than another. Also if it includes manuals, disks, etc might improve the price.
I've actually got a full-length AWE32 in one of my thing-a-majigs. Personally though, I recall the AWE32 being a bit of a pain since it was ISA "Plug and Play". On a 486 or earlier that did not support "plug and play" you had to load some obscure command-line "plug-and-play" drivers to initialize the thing during boot. But once set up, I think it was fairly backwards compatible, and not so much a PNP pain on a Pentium era system. Some games could make use of the wave table audio mixing for some awesome sounding music.
The AWE32 don't tend to fetch as much as the AWE64 but still rather sought after by enthusiasts. One of the things an AWE32 could do that Creative made into a proprietary part with the AWE64, was the ability to use 30 pin RAM SIMMs to extend the memory.
So I take it no one had an Audigy or X-Fi?
http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/high-end- ... 32894.html
TL:DR you're paying for features, not sound quality. In many ways you're better of spending money in the analogue part of the circuits; ie amplification/speakers.
I think the fact that the ALC889 device they tested was a ASUS Republic of gamers board (Rampage III Formula) might skew the results a tad. ASUS puts a lot of effort into sound quality in their ROG line. That board has SupremeFX X-Fi 2. Makes me cock my head that they call SupremeFX "vanilla" ALC889. If you want to test high against low end, don't use a premium gaming board that advertises a high quality audio setup as your "low end".
Test it against a $39 fly-by-night mobo where the analog audio traces are nice and cozy with the power traces going to the fan...that's "low end" 8)
About two weeks ago found a box of abandoned ancient PC cards with 2 Mobos. I decided not to get the Mobos and grabbed all the PC cards. One of then is a Sound Card and works well when it was installed on my old P4 server., it had no sound before this. I am a newbie dumpster diver, there is always hope to find older hardware from dumpster diving.
This has been me thread about older PCs for a few years:
http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions ... age27.html
Glad I came across this forum and decided to join. The software and support here for retro PCs is very impressive. Thanks and keepup the good work.