Going from onboard sound to a dedicated sound card is like turning your speakers on for the first time. Even mobos with good sound (including xfi) are not as good as a dedicated sound card. The creative sb card is a gaming card, all though far better than onboard sound but at the end of the day its still a gaming card and after awhile you start to notice that. Im not saying i have an awsome sound system and im no audiophile but any one who is would tell you to go for a better card for movies and music probley more expensive.................... in our world but maybe not where you come from, land of the almost free computer parts lol. Still a great buy as i like to game so no buyers remorse here.
PS looks awsome in the side window with its little white X-FI lite shining out all bright and all.
Cravin, thanks for the education on sound cards. I have only owned on sound card in my life and that was some years ago. I never realized most dedicated sound cards are much better than the onboard sound cards...but it sure makes sense when you compare the difference between onboard GPU's and dedicated GPU's.
Speaking of GPU's I just installed the long awaited GTS 450 SC and I am very happy with it. After waiting an entire year I now have Direct X 11!
Now about this new sound card...
I've just completed reading over 60 reviews on this Creative PCI Express Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Champion Series Sound Card...
I noticed a pattern: most people either were totally in love with it and gave it stellar reviews, or, they hate it with a passion and vowed to never purchase Creative ever again!
Not many in-between'ers.
Most Creative Sound Blaster Hater's were complaining about 1] Driver issues, 2] Poor tech support, 3] Wires that broke easily.
I did find two reviews where the guys explained very carefully how to do the install. I was hoping to ask you if you have any comments on this...
Here's one guys recommendations:
Other Thoughts:
Install Log: Made sure onboard sound in bios was disabled
1) Uninstalled audio drivers, which included using device manager for uninstall of motherboard sound drivers then shut down.
2)Connected cables to pci-e card then put card in slot.
3) Connected cables to external I/O drive BEFORE slipping drive into case.
4) Start Win 7 and shut off Anti Virus and all other progs.
5) started Creative Install disk then rebooted at completion.
6) Ran Creative autoupdate and basically repeated entire install process, restarted.
7) Ran windows update and voila new update for creative gets installed, restarted
Ran creative autoupdate again and once more 2 more updates were installed bringing me to final driver version of 2.17.7. BTW it took this last update to get the lights on I/O drive to come on. LAST THOUGHT...after every update and restart, make sure you shut down all running programs every time, this will minimize potential conflicts. Good Luck and enjoy the awesome sound!
So that is quite a detailed instruction.
Other reviewers swore to never use the auto updater but to go directly to Creative's website for the drivers...
Have you any thoughts on the install process?
I'm hoping to do it right. If do experience lots of trouble with it and cannot troubleshoot it, I can always pack it up and sell it for more than I paid.
But I really would like to have a nice sound card operational on this system.
Can you share any insights you learned?
And, where are you? Which part of this beautiful planet/
Soar