For what it's worth, I still have not heard my on-board sound system on my Gigabyte motherboard so I cannot tell you how good or bad it is. I simply prefer standalone soundcards.
My two cents.
Even though I'm in total agreement regarding 3rd party sound cards being the best solution for quality audio.... the latest Realtek offerings are far superior to what they were putting out 3-4 years ago. The recent chips have a built in hardware equalizer that can fine tune the sound, plus the noise floor has been reduced. Bass can still be a bit flabby and the highs a bit muffled, most of that can be corrected using the eq.
What I hear in the quality cards is a type of transparency & clarity, almost as if the sound were three dimensional... this a partly from quality electronics (filtering) and circuit board design.
Ap
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Home PremiumIntel Core 2 Duo @ 3.00gHz4 GBATI Radeon HD 2600 XT
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Assembled in my workshop
- OS
- Windows 7 Home Premium
- CPU
- Intel Core 2 Duo @ 3.00gHz
- Motherboard
- Gigabyte GA-P35-S3G
- Memory
- 4 GB
- Graphics Card(s)
- ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT
- Sound Card
- RME 24/96 Card, Realtek Internal Audio PreSonus FireStudio
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Acer 1917 (x2)
- Screen Resolution
- 1280 x 1024 on both monitors
- Hard Drives
- Three 250GB Seagate SATA Barracuda 7200rpm
- PSU
- Rosewill 500-watt
- Case
- Rosewill mid-tower
- Cooling
- Noctua NH-U9B (CPU), PwrSupply fan + single large case Fan
- Keyboard
- Macally w/2/USB ports.
- Mouse
- Trackman Wheel
- Other Info
- Event 20/20 bas studio monitors, Yamaha sub.
Rackmount Korg/Roland/Yamaha synthesizers,
Cubase MIDI/audio recording. Sony Soundforge audio/mastering software. CD Architect Mastering. RME & Presonus audio interfaces.
