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Thread: XFi vs onboard w/ Win7
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10-30-2011, 06:32 PM #1
XFi vs onboard w/ Win7
Got an X-Fi Xtreme-Music and I've had it since when they came out. They were all the rage when XP was around and now I'm starting to wonder if there is a point to have hardware sound if games are getting so much better through software. What does B3D think? Keep the X-Fi around and continue using Alchemy, or put it in my XP play thing machine and just use onboard in Windows 7 since there is no point?
Games I'm currently playing and wondering about are more modern.
Battlefield 3
Mafia 2
Metro2033
Dirt 3
And later Skyrim.
I know back in the day they were great to offload sound processing from the CPU, but now wondering if it matter anymore with such beefy CPU's.
Anybody else ditch their dedicated sound?
Forgot to mention, I'm currently using 3 different devices for sound.
Razer Orca for quiet gaming straight to sound card
Logitech 11 dollar cheapo speakers for background noise when in kitchen
EQ'd PA speakers for anything else.Turd
Intel Core i5 750 | GIgabyte P55 UD3R | 16GB PNY 1600 | Asus 5850 TOP |120GB Corsair Neutron GTX (Out-RMA) | Raidmax Scorpio | Stock cooling | Thermaltake 1000w | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 | Samsung GS2 Shostock 2 | InFocus 1080p DLP Projector 120" | 24" NEC MultiSync 2470WNX | Logitech G930 | JBL Creature 2 2.1
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11-11-2012, 03:33 PM #2
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thats nice
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11-11-2012, 06:07 PM #3
This is a very old thread.
Turd
Intel Core i5 750 | GIgabyte P55 UD3R | 16GB PNY 1600 | Asus 5850 TOP |120GB Corsair Neutron GTX (Out-RMA) | Raidmax Scorpio | Stock cooling | Thermaltake 1000w | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 | Samsung GS2 Shostock 2 | InFocus 1080p DLP Projector 120" | 24" NEC MultiSync 2470WNX | Logitech G930 | JBL Creature 2 2.1
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11-11-2012, 11:32 PM #4
Old topic. But good its brought up. I own a Z77 deluxe board by ASus. Currently don't remember the model. But I was wondering if it will be an upgrade if I would install a pci sound card.
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11-11-2012, 11:51 PM #5
Yeah, might be old, but I actually find it interesting. I am running a ASUS Xonar Xense card right now, which is not supported on Windows 8, but there are people out there that modified the drivers to add support to Windows 8. Since ASUS discontinued the card, they don't have Windows 8 support for it. Sucks, but what can you do. :/
Either way, I feel a difference in music when playing it through the Xonar instead of just the Realtek onboard audio. Could be because I'm using high-end headphones that need more power to get good quality and high-volume music out of them. This is where i find audio cards helpful. Otherwise unless you have good speakers you won't see the difference in quality.
If you're on a budget, by all means stay with the onboard audio. It's not bad, and I use it on many systems that don't have a dedicated audio card, but for my ultimate entertainment and gaming system I still use a dedicated audio card. Few advantages is that you start hearing sounds that were previously unheard due to the limitations of the number of sounds the audio card can play at the same time, and the noise-to-audio dbA. Sometimes the crisper content can get lost due to a lower noise-to-audio ratio.
I'd like to hear other's opinions on this. I might upgrade to an even better audio card for my future builds, that have native Windows 8 support, but I don't think that will happen anytime soon.Main System (X79 Beast):
Intel Core i7-3960X @ 4.6GHz | ASUS P9X79 WS | Kingston HyperX Genesis 32GB (8x4GB) DDR3 1600MHz Memory Kit | Nvidia GeForce GTX 690 (Main Card) | GIGABYTE GeForce GTX 650 Ti OC 2GB (Dedicated PhysX card) | ASUS Xonar Xense Audio Card | NZXT Phantom 820 Case | CM Silent Pro Gold 1200W PSU | 2 x Kingston HyperX 240GB 3K SSDs in RAID 0 | 2x WD RE3 1TB Hard Drives | WD Caviar Blue 500GB Hard Drive (Back-up Storage) | Noctua NH-D14 CPU Cooler | Windows 8 Pro
Test Bench (X79 System):
Intel Core i7-3820 @ 4.6Ghz | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | Kingston HyperX 16GB DDR3 2133MHz Memory Kit | XFX HD7870 | Aerocool Striker-X Air test bench | Rosewill Lightning 1300W | LSI 3ware 9750-8i SAS+SATA RAID Card | Kingston HyperX 240GB 5K SSD | Seagate 500GB Hard Drive | Thermaltake Frio OCK CPU Cooler | Windows 8 Pro
Laptop (Macbook Pro):
Intel Core i7-2720QM @ 2.2GHz (3.3GHz Turbo) | Kingston HyperX 16GB 1600MHz DDR3 | AMD Radeon HD 6750M 1GB (Dedicated Video Card) | Intel HD Graphics 3000 512MB (Integrated) | Zalman N128GB SSD | Hitachi 500GB 7200 RPM Hard Drive | Mac OS X 10.8.2

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11-12-2012, 12:01 AM #6
The only reason to get a sound card these days is due to higher quality DACs and amps. If you don't actually have cans or speakers capable of the quality difference then no reason to drop a hundred on a sound card. The only problem with onboard is if you have a ground buzz for any reason. Other than that the quality difference wont be heard. Most good gaming headphones these days come with an external amp which modifies quality anyways, so having a sound card wont make a difference there either.
Turd
Intel Core i5 750 | GIgabyte P55 UD3R | 16GB PNY 1600 | Asus 5850 TOP |120GB Corsair Neutron GTX (Out-RMA) | Raidmax Scorpio | Stock cooling | Thermaltake 1000w | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 | Samsung GS2 Shostock 2 | InFocus 1080p DLP Projector 120" | 24" NEC MultiSync 2470WNX | Logitech G930 | JBL Creature 2 2.1
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11-12-2012, 01:12 AM #7
the reply got my laughing



anyway since this was revived, might as well give my thoughts. yes motherboard today would have built-in 5.1 or 7.1 audio but audio cards will still give a crisp and clearer sound. The difference is quite noticeable I believe. Im using an ASUS ThunderFX external audio card now using audio devices I listed on my signature. I like the improvement on bass.WordPress Website Builder - PC Hardware Enthusiast - Content Writer - Economist - Foodie
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ASUS GTX 660 DCU II
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OCZ Vector 128gb - Boot Drive
Wester Digital Caviar Blue 500gb - Seagate Barracuda 500gb
Sony DVD-RW
Coolermaster Storm Trooper
Toshiba Regza 24" Power LCD-TV
Logitech G110 - Tesoro H5 Gungnir
ASUS ThunderFX External Sound Card - Roccat Kave 5.1 - Creative A320
Secondary
Lenovo G480 - Intel i3-2350m - SuperSpeed S306 120gb - 6gb ram
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11-12-2012, 03:44 AM #8
Depending on what your onboard DAC is I doubt seriously there is any difference on those 2, no offense. The specs on both aren't good enough to tell a real difference. Any kind of treble or bass differences are different internal EQs which can be changed by you.
The headset has its own amp which changes the sound quality coming out of your sound card, and the Creative 2.1 has worse specs than my JBL 2.1.
Seriously, the difference is only noticed on audio equipment that has good specs like studio cans or studio bookshelf speakers which have SNR and frequency response that you wont find on something that only costs a few bills.Turd
Intel Core i5 750 | GIgabyte P55 UD3R | 16GB PNY 1600 | Asus 5850 TOP |120GB Corsair Neutron GTX (Out-RMA) | Raidmax Scorpio | Stock cooling | Thermaltake 1000w | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 | Samsung GS2 Shostock 2 | InFocus 1080p DLP Projector 120" | 24" NEC MultiSync 2470WNX | Logitech G930 | JBL Creature 2 2.1
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11-12-2012, 05:38 AM #9
I do notice some differences in the songs I listen

To some songs I would hear some things in the background I never heard before. Sorry for the cheap audio stuff but it's the only thing I can afford :\
Bought the roccat kave 5.1 from a rich guy that bought it but never used it (it was unopened LOL) just because he shifted his PC theme from blue to red LOL (*sigh* rich guys...) he sold it to me for US$50 based on my conversion. Well that sounded like a good deal so I went for it.Last edited by najiro; 11-12-2012 at 05:42 AM.
WordPress Website Builder - PC Hardware Enthusiast - Content Writer - Economist - Foodie
Primary
i5-2500k @ 4.0 Ghz
ASUS P8Z77-V
ASUS GTX 660 DCU II
Corsair Vengeance 2x4gb
Corsair H90
Be Quiet Dark Power Pro 10 850w
OCZ Vector 128gb - Boot Drive
Wester Digital Caviar Blue 500gb - Seagate Barracuda 500gb
Sony DVD-RW
Coolermaster Storm Trooper
Toshiba Regza 24" Power LCD-TV
Logitech G110 - Tesoro H5 Gungnir
ASUS ThunderFX External Sound Card - Roccat Kave 5.1 - Creative A320
Secondary
Lenovo G480 - Intel i3-2350m - SuperSpeed S306 120gb - 6gb ram
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11-12-2012, 06:00 AM #10
I wasn't trying to offend you, I currently only have a Turtlebeach X12 headset for BF3 gaming and my JBL 2.1 setup that I got about 7 years or so ago. I can't afford what I want either, so wasn't meant to offend. Just saying, there would be no difference in actual quality. As for hearing things in the background.....um what?
Also, what audio format do you use?Turd
Intel Core i5 750 | GIgabyte P55 UD3R | 16GB PNY 1600 | Asus 5850 TOP |120GB Corsair Neutron GTX (Out-RMA) | Raidmax Scorpio | Stock cooling | Thermaltake 1000w | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 | Samsung GS2 Shostock 2 | InFocus 1080p DLP Projector 120" | 24" NEC MultiSync 2470WNX | Logitech G930 | JBL Creature 2 2.1
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11-12-2012, 06:20 AM #11
There was one song.. (hmmm i might be discriminating myself here but ohh well just for an example)..
I download songs from youtube using a youtube downloader/converter..
it was the "To Be With You" by Mr.Big. I heard laughing in the background before they counted and started singing LOL. Never heard the laughing before. Generally I just find the songs clearer now
I wasn't offended
I think the story of how I got the kave is funny. I mean it was with him for 6 months... didn't even bother opening and testing it.
Anyway, popular brands of multimedia speakers available in my country include Creative, Edifier, Logitech, and Altec Lansing. The higher-end of logitech stuff are haaaaaaaaard to find. so with JBL and Bose.. Being near to China. Cheap chinese audio stuff are literally flooding the market. Typical households here would have those with speakers as large are CRT monitors LOL. The above-mentioned brands just cant compete with these cheap Chinese speakers.... Even though they sound awful like a broken snare drum... having the loudest speakers in the neighborhood is the common trend here LOL.WordPress Website Builder - PC Hardware Enthusiast - Content Writer - Economist - Foodie
Primary
i5-2500k @ 4.0 Ghz
ASUS P8Z77-V
ASUS GTX 660 DCU II
Corsair Vengeance 2x4gb
Corsair H90
Be Quiet Dark Power Pro 10 850w
OCZ Vector 128gb - Boot Drive
Wester Digital Caviar Blue 500gb - Seagate Barracuda 500gb
Sony DVD-RW
Coolermaster Storm Trooper
Toshiba Regza 24" Power LCD-TV
Logitech G110 - Tesoro H5 Gungnir
ASUS ThunderFX External Sound Card - Roccat Kave 5.1 - Creative A320
Secondary
Lenovo G480 - Intel i3-2350m - SuperSpeed S306 120gb - 6gb ram
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11-12-2012, 06:37 AM #12
Youtube audio is going to be MP3. You wont hear a difference in quality using MP3 as even the crappiest of crap can play 320k and sound decent.
Just so you know, I was an audio engineer working live and studio sound with my dad for 8 years. I'm kind of an audiophile and tested my theories on sound cards vs onboard on several different professional setups. I'm telling you for real, there is no difference on your current audio speakers. The only time I could clearly hear a difference is when I was using class A amps with studio bookshelf speakers going through a small Yamaha mixer.Turd
Intel Core i5 750 | GIgabyte P55 UD3R | 16GB PNY 1600 | Asus 5850 TOP |120GB Corsair Neutron GTX (Out-RMA) | Raidmax Scorpio | Stock cooling | Thermaltake 1000w | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 | Samsung GS2 Shostock 2 | InFocus 1080p DLP Projector 120" | 24" NEC MultiSync 2470WNX | Logitech G930 | JBL Creature 2 2.1
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11-12-2012, 06:51 AM #13
I see.. hmmm i dunno i can really sense some difference X__X
I like music, i listen to music all the time while working. not really strict about quality
ANyway since you got me curious, what formats are the best in quality for music? what's the difference between 16bit and 24bit of "sound quality"?? I can see 2 options of "2 channel, 16 bit, 192000 Hz studio quality" and another one on 24 bit.. but ultimately it will depend on the format of audio played right?WordPress Website Builder - PC Hardware Enthusiast - Content Writer - Economist - Foodie
Primary
i5-2500k @ 4.0 Ghz
ASUS P8Z77-V
ASUS GTX 660 DCU II
Corsair Vengeance 2x4gb
Corsair H90
Be Quiet Dark Power Pro 10 850w
OCZ Vector 128gb - Boot Drive
Wester Digital Caviar Blue 500gb - Seagate Barracuda 500gb
Sony DVD-RW
Coolermaster Storm Trooper
Toshiba Regza 24" Power LCD-TV
Logitech G110 - Tesoro H5 Gungnir
ASUS ThunderFX External Sound Card - Roccat Kave 5.1 - Creative A320
Secondary
Lenovo G480 - Intel i3-2350m - SuperSpeed S306 120gb - 6gb ram
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11-12-2012, 08:06 AM #14
Kinda hard to explain really. Think of video. 16 vs 32bit. You get more colors right? 16 vs 24bit in sound like like a larger chunk of sound or depth. Maybe somebody can elaborate further. There is just more, or larger pipe if you will.
The Hz level is sample rate, how many times the audio is measured per second.
An MP3 has a maximum of 320K/s which is 320bit rate. 24bit 96KHz is 4.39Mb/s or roughly 33MB per song whereas the MP3 will be much smaller. If you think of it like graphics textures, the larger carries higher resolution meaning better visual quality. In sound, it is the same way. If you can actually hear the difference is subjective to how good your ear is and how good your speakers are.
As for your first and second sentence, they pretty much contradict each other. If you weren't strict with quality then you don't need a sound card. If you listen to MP3s, sound card isn't really being used. Which leads me to answer your other question. As far as I know currently FLAC (lossless audio) is the best format you can have. This mixed with GOOD speakers or cans will show the major differences between onboard and a sound card. On that, you saying you heard something you missed depends entirely on your recording itself. Changing formats or sound card wont place missing audio into a file.Turd
Intel Core i5 750 | GIgabyte P55 UD3R | 16GB PNY 1600 | Asus 5850 TOP |120GB Corsair Neutron GTX (Out-RMA) | Raidmax Scorpio | Stock cooling | Thermaltake 1000w | Windows 7 Ultimate x64 | Samsung GS2 Shostock 2 | InFocus 1080p DLP Projector 120" | 24" NEC MultiSync 2470WNX | Logitech G930 | JBL Creature 2 2.1
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11-12-2012, 08:18 AM #15
PP, I listen to a bunch of FLAC file type music files. Best quality you can get, as far as I can tell.
Main System (X79 Beast):
Intel Core i7-3960X @ 4.6GHz | ASUS P9X79 WS | Kingston HyperX Genesis 32GB (8x4GB) DDR3 1600MHz Memory Kit | Nvidia GeForce GTX 690 (Main Card) | GIGABYTE GeForce GTX 650 Ti OC 2GB (Dedicated PhysX card) | ASUS Xonar Xense Audio Card | NZXT Phantom 820 Case | CM Silent Pro Gold 1200W PSU | 2 x Kingston HyperX 240GB 3K SSDs in RAID 0 | 2x WD RE3 1TB Hard Drives | WD Caviar Blue 500GB Hard Drive (Back-up Storage) | Noctua NH-D14 CPU Cooler | Windows 8 Pro
Test Bench (X79 System):
Intel Core i7-3820 @ 4.6Ghz | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | Kingston HyperX 16GB DDR3 2133MHz Memory Kit | XFX HD7870 | Aerocool Striker-X Air test bench | Rosewill Lightning 1300W | LSI 3ware 9750-8i SAS+SATA RAID Card | Kingston HyperX 240GB 5K SSD | Seagate 500GB Hard Drive | Thermaltake Frio OCK CPU Cooler | Windows 8 Pro
Laptop (Macbook Pro):
Intel Core i7-2720QM @ 2.2GHz (3.3GHz Turbo) | Kingston HyperX 16GB 1600MHz DDR3 | AMD Radeon HD 6750M 1GB (Dedicated Video Card) | Intel HD Graphics 3000 512MB (Integrated) | Zalman N128GB SSD | Hitachi 500GB 7200 RPM Hard Drive | Mac OS X 10.8.2

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