Houdy curtis,

You'll get loads of suggestions and opinions on this but the best cards I've 
had have all been Creative labs cards.  I'me  getting rid of this real-tech 
audio card I've got in this machine I have and going for another creative 
labs card. I've only seen the external variety once but both types  are 
exactly what the doctor ordered in giving ya the best bang for your buck. My 
favorite of the bunch was the sound blaster audigy.

Tony
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Curtis Delzer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "the PC audio discussion list" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, July 22, 2008 4:13 PM
Subject: decent sound card.


Hi all! Well, apparently, my old SoundBlaster Live! has bit the big
one. Drivers, loaded, effects, loaded, no sound, though. :) This is a
modern computer, so nothing connects to the disk drives like for
audio from cd roms as in the old days, but, nothing! It worked
before, but now, nothing.
What do you all recommend about a decent sound card? I record a lot
from differing sources, so need something of decent quality. This
"real_tech97," is a piece of sh**t, really, sounds like a transistor
radio through my audio_file Sony headphones, all highs and no bass
hardly at all, and do not want to record over a motherboard installed
chip set, under any conditions. So please, flood me with suggestions,
and why, etc. I really do need to know!
I would prefer a PCI mounted one, though an external USB is not out
of the question, as much as why someone would recommend one more than
they would a PCI mounted one. Why would an external USB mounted one
be preferred, portability, or true audio-file quality? Do sound cards
come with R I A A equalization for turntables and cartridges? It
might be important, since if I bought, sometime down the line a V15
type 5 and a GOOD turntable, I'd want something that would justify
such a good pickup, to be transferred into digital form properly. I
don't need "roll off" in the card on the bottom end or top end, just
flat response between, probably 10Hz to way above 20000Hz. Those who
think that twenty thousand Hz is the top end for music don't know
about overtones and double speed recording of sound since I want to
be doing, so that when restored to proper octave, no loss at the top
end, know what I mean?

Thanks, and come on guys, let your hair down as to why you think you
have the best sound card.
I truly need to know, and wouldn't you know it? Today or soonest
since I have projects and my good old SB_Live! is no longer living.
True it had a noise floor of probably no more than minus 65DB, but
hey, most of the time, it worked fine and there was no limit on the
bass response. I probably want to be able to record at 192000Hz, so
keep that in mind if they exist yet. At least I want to be able to
record at 88200Hz sampling.

Curtis Delzer
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
skype: callto:curtis1014
W B 6 H E F
Fessenden, North Dakota; 58438-7300


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