|
PPC > Reviews>
Sound
Creative's Audigy sound card
Ian Waugh reckons that if this is your first
major "music" card the software bundle provides an
excellent range of software to get you started.
|
Product |
Audigy |
|
From |
Creative Labs |
|
Tel |
01245 265265 |
|
www |
www.europe.creative.com |
|
Prices |
Audigy Player £89.99 |
|
|
Audigy Platinum £179.99 |
|
|
Audigy Platinum eX
£239.99 |
|
Ratings |
|
Gamers |
9/10 |
|
Musicians |
8/10 |
|
Requirements |
Pentium 266, 64Mb
RAM (128Mb recommended), 160Mb free HD space, Windows
98SE/2000/Me |
|
Verdict
For gamers, the Audigy
will doubtless become the de facto standard. |
Creative Labs' new Audigy sound card has appeared
quite suddenly without the months of pre-launch publicity that often
accompanies these events. Users of Creative's Sound Blaster series
have been waiting an interminable time for more efficient drivers
although it's extremely unlikely that these will now appear, given
that the Audigy now has them.
Unlike the SoundBlaster range which was based on the
EMU10K1 chip (which was also used in Emu's APS card), the Audigy is
based on a brand new chip - the Audigy - which claims to have more
than four times the power of the EMU10K1.
Games R Us
A major part of the Audigy market must be the games
market and the card offers up to four multi-environments with
environment morphing, a new 3D audio engine and EAX Advanced HD
audio effects.
However, the card also boasts high quality audio
(coming up) and Dolby Surround Sound, and as well as playing games,
Creative obviously expect users to play DVDs through the system.
The card features a host of connections - minijack
Mic and Line In, Line Out, Rear Out and Digital In/Out. A flyer
cable attaches to a joystick/MIDI port on another backplane plate
although you don't have to use this if you don't want to.
Interestingly,
the card also sports a SB1394 socket which is Creative's version of
Apple's version of (still with us?) IEEE1394 commonly known as
FireWire. As well as allowing you to connect FireWire devices to
your PC (an area on the company's web site tells you which devices
have proved compatible), you can also link PCs for multi-player
games.
Platinum
There are three versions of Audigy. All feature the
same card but they come with different software bundles and hardware
add-ons. The Platinum version has an eye to the music market and
comes with a special version of Cubasis VST, ReCycle Lite, WaveLab
Lite, Arturia's Storm Platinum Edition, Vienna SoundFont Studio
(still just version 2.3), plus the usual CreativeWare (previously
LiveWare) collection of EAX demos, utilities, and so on.
But the main addition for musicians is the Audigy
Drive (very similar to the Live! Drive) which slots into a spare
drive bay and features a host of connections, making the whole
process of plugging stuff into the card much easier. Connections
include Optical S/PDIF, RCA S/PDIF (mainly for DVD and digital
music), Aux In. Headphones, Mic/Line In, MIDI In and Out and a
SB1394 socket. There is also a wireless remote control, further
proof that Creative expects the Audigy to be at the heart of a home
entertainment centre.
In
addition, the Platinum eX version features a breakout box which
allows the Audigy Drive to be placed away from the PC affording more
convenience and possibly preventing extraneous noises from the
computer affecting the audio.
Musicians will be pleased to see that SoundFont
support is continued with SoundFont 2.1 being the standard. System
RAM is used for storage and can use up to 1Gb should you have so
much. SoundFonts are a super way into low-cost but powerful
computer-based sampling.
24-bit or not 24-bit
We now come to one of the Big Things about the
Audigy - it has 24-bit plastered all over it. However, here things
get a little murky and it required a couple of conversations with
the Tech Bods to sort it out.
The card is billed as 24-bit
and boasts 24-bit Analogue-to-Digital and Digital-to-Analogue
converters. In fact, the specs clearly say: "24-bit
Analogue-to-Digital conversion of analogue inputs". Which mean
it records at 24-bit, right?
No, not quite. It converts the signal to 24-bit
digital and then records it at 16-bit. 16-bit 48kHz to be exact. So
that's pretty much the status quo, then?
Well, again, not quite. Creative claims that as the
signal is first converted to 24-bit that the eventual 16-bit
conversion is higher quality than a signal recorded at 16 bits from
the off. Again, see here
for more about this.
And
you can't argue with that. The card boasts a signal-to-noise ratio
of 100dB (compared to 96dB of the Live! card) so the overall audio
quality ought to be rather better than the Live!
However, musicians, still only have a 16-bit
recording to play with and even though it may be better-than-yer-average
16-bit recording, it's still not 24-bit. Musicians looking to move
up to 24-bit will have to look elsewhere and they'll find it
difficult to regard this as other than a missed opportunity to make
the Audigy a serious 24-bit card for the musician.
Drivers
On the positive side, at last musicians get ASIO
drivers. These are low-latency drivers which mean no delay between
playing a note and hearing the sound. The specs claim a latency of
2ms although it may be a little higher, depending on your system but
this is a major step forward over the Live! card and makes the
Audigy eminently suitable for music recording.
For gamers, the Audigy will doubtless become the de
facto standard.
Musicians will be disappointed that it's not a full
24-bit card and rightly so. But if you don't need 24-bit audio (and
not everyone will), then SoundFont support, ASIO drivers, the high
quality of the 16-bit recordings and the convenience of the Audigy
Drive (with the Platinum versions) still make it a desirable card.
And if this is your first major "music" card the software
bundle provides an excellent range of software to get you started.
Ian Waugh
|