I spent a lot of time listening to music today and I must say that the Prelude completely outclasses my modded X-Fi XtremeMusic w/LM4562 opamps in every way possible when it comes to music. To be honest, I really didn't think there would be much change over my XtremeMusic and that the improvements of the Prelude would be subtle at best. However, once I started listening, I was pretty much grinning ear to ear![]()
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My setup:
Receiver: Sony STR-GX900ES
Speakers: Boston Acoustics CR67 Bookshelves
Subwoofer: JBL PS120
Headphones: Sennheiser HD595
Source: Various High Bitrate MP3s / FLACs
Nothing very high end, but a modest budget setup consisting of some good HiFi deals I've gotten over the years. I mostly use the 2.1 for music/games, and headphones in online FPS and late night computer use.
No pics of the board due to it being in my computer right now, but here are some general pics of my setup.
ok ok I just had to rename it...
Rightmark Audio Tests:
According to the RMAA X-Fi setup guide, X-Fi chips should be set to test at 24bit, then match the freqency on the sampling rate from Audio Creation Mode. Check here: http://audio.rightmark.org/downloads...MAA%20v5.5.pdf
The cable I used for the loopback test is identical to the one listed here: https://www.cablesforless.com/index....D&ProdID=15338
16bit, 44kHz (only to compare to XSReviews review)
24bit, 44kHz
24bit, 48kHz
24bit, 96kHz
RightMark Comparisons:
X-Meridian, Prodigy 7.1, X-Fi Elite Pro, Xonar D2 - 16bit 44kHz: http://sg.vr-zone.com/articles/Asus_...ts/5135-3.html
X-Meridian, Prodigy 7.1, X-Fi Elite Pro, Xonar D2 - 24bit 44kHz: http://sg.vr-zone.com/articles/Asus_...ts/5135-7.html
X-Meridian, Prodigy 7.1, X-Fi Elite Pro, Xonar D2 - 24bit 48kHz: http://sg.vr-zone.com/articles/Asus_...ts/5135-8.html
X-Meridian, Prodigy 7.1, X-Fi Elite Pro, Xonar D2 - 24bit 96kHz: http://sg.vr-zone.com/articles/Asus_...ts/5135-9.html
Stock XtremeMusic @ HotHardware 24/96: http://www.hothardware.com/printarti...?articleid=735
Modded XtremeMusic @ Head-Fi boards 24/48 24/96: http://www.head-fi.org/forums/showthread.php?p=3235872
Subjective Music Listening Test: Auzentech Prelude vs Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic
I listened to a wide variety of music ranging from trance, female vocalists, symphonic metal, classical, hard rock.
Low Freq Extension
Holy bananas! The bass on this card clearly extends MUCH lower than the XtremeMusic. In comparison to the Prelude, the XtremeMusic sounded very muddy and pretty bloated. The bass is nice and tight on the Prelude. This was really noticable when listening to Trance and other bass heavy music. A lot of the Tiesto tracks I listened to really highlighted this difference.
Midrange / Vocals
Vocals on the Prelude are pristine. I think the Prelude excelled while playing Female Vocals. Very pleasing to my ears. There were a lot of times when the XtremeMusic sounded sibilant in comparison.
'Microdynamics'
By Microdynamics, I am referring to the subtle sounds in Music from background instruments, etc. My Boston Acoustics were able to present these much easier using the Prelude. I find myself listening to a lot of my music over again because I am picking up subtle sounds that I just havn't noticed or picked up from the XtremeMusic. The prelude really unlocked some potential I never knew my Boston Acoustics bookshelves had.
Soundstage / Imaging
I think this is probably the biggest area of improvement. The Prelude offers a very nice and wide soundstage and has really opened up my music. Stereo seperation is vastly superior and instrument details are much more present. Imaging on the Prelude is far superior and I am able to pinpoint where the sounds are with ease. Imaging on the XtremeMusic was quite poor and narrow in comparison.
Final Thoughts:
Overall, I am very happy with my new Prelude. I can't comment on how this stacks up against the X-Meridian, but I imagine that the Analog on that is just as good. I don't think that the Creative XtremeMusic or other X-Fis are bad cards, its just that my standards have now been raised after listening to the Prelude. The XtremeMusic is still certainly much better than onboard, and I honestly don't know if you will be able to reap the benefits of the Prelude with Computer Speakers. Its definitely the better bang/buck card, whereas I think the Prelude is more of a Niche product. I also don't know how the Prelude stacks up against some good external DACs, but those can usually be a good deal more expensive.
Please, please, do not use purchase this card if you somehow think that this will improve sound quality on your computer speakers connected through Digital Coaxial or Optical connections. If you use Digital/Optical, you are completely bypassing the AKM DAC on the Prelude and using whatever is in your speaker's amp for Analog conversion. Anyone using Z-5500s/Creative/Klipsch PC offerings with a Prelude connected via Digital/Optical needs to be beaten to death IMO..... Besides, DDL/DTS support is nonexistant until a driver update Q1 '08 , so that means 2.1 is the max you will get out of coax/opt unless your source is pre-encoded. Auzentech's Analog output + Creative's hardware games support is why you buy this card!
Drivers are supposedly a mess in Vista, though I havn't had any problems in XP. I do miss a system tray icon where I can change between Entertainment/Audio/Game modes. Other than that, its pretty much identical to Creative drivers minus an Auzentech stamp on it.
Also I would have to say that decent opamps don't necessarily mean decent sound quality. While they can certainly improve the sound to a degree, its the circuitry that matters most. The parts used and the design of the Auzentech is far superior against my modded XtremeMusic w/LM4562s. Despite using the same opamps as the Prelude, there was no contest when discerning which card had the better Analog output.
As always YMMV, since we all have different audio setups and listening tastes. I know a few of us have real high-end HiFi setups and would love to hear your opinion on the Prelude vs external DACs / Data Transports / etc. I'm also curious if Logitech/Klipsch/Creative speaker users can tell a difference while using the Prelude.
Still need to test games.... lol.
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