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michaelconway
Suspended User
Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Daly City , CA
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I recently switched from the soundcard to the ultralite, and i can say wow. Such big of a diffrence for me, crystal now. Worth everypenny. But here is what i recomend, if you can offord it go for it if you like it keep it, if you dont return it and get your money back.
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Apr-22-2007 22:57
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wrzonance
Moon

Registered: Aug 2003
Location: Seattle, WA
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Apr-23-2007 01:44
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DJSentinel
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: May 2006
Location:
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Re: How important are soundcards REALLY?
| quote: | Originally posted by beats and beeps
Ok, so I have an m-audiophile 2496 or whatever, you know the common cheap one lots of people have.
I'm really confused about how soundcards work. Like, all the sound is processed through it right, so everything I hear through MY speakers, has to be someone affected by this soundcard right.
My question is, does the sound card effect my quality of recording. For instance, does that mp3 render on my desktop have an audiophile 2496 "sound" to it, or is it only when I listen to it on my computer?
Basically my question is, if I had some fancy ass sound card like a MOTU or something, does that just change the way the sound I HEAR is processed? Or does it actually change the way the sound is processed when i render down a wav file or whatever onto my hard drive? |
All the sound card does is handle audio I/O "in and out" of the computer. Higher quality soundcards will be cleaner sounding and be able to work @ higher sample-rates, but you will not see a gigantic boost in sound quality. I am using my iMac's built in sound card, and I get about 10ms of latency. Seems fine to me.
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Apr-23-2007 12:21
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Low Profile
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Oct 2003
Location: Akureyri
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it can affect recording, yes, but playback, hardly at all
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Apr-23-2007 15:35
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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
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| quote: | Originally posted by echosystm
As long as it has balanced IO and semi-decent AD/DA, then its irrelevant.
...the 24/96 has neither 
The problem with internal cards is that they can pick up noise from inside your computer. Best to get a card which has a breakout to keep the AD/DA outside. Really, anything delta44 and upward is fine, I doubt you will notice any difference unless you're doing recording - even then I still dont think you will notice a few DB in SNR. Remember, this is dance music, people are always going to say you need a certain mic, a certain preamp, a certain DA/AD, but at the end of the day theres so much shit going on in there you're never going to hear the difference.
The point of diminishing returns is close |
er...hate to point this out but the 24/96 uses the same DA chips and chip architecture as the more expensive delta series right up to the 1010. all you're paying for is balanced I/O and more I/O's.
also, balanced I/O's will not improve sound quality of the soundcard itself, only reduce interference and potential noise between devices. this can easily be avoided by not having long cable runs, keeping your audio lines away from power lines and buying decent quality unbalanced cables.
if the original question was asked with a view to find out if it worth shelling out on a new soundcard, I would say no. monitor speakers are probably have the best value in terms of upgrades and cash spent vs performance or quality increase
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Apr-23-2007 17:11
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