Monday, June 1st 2015
ASUS Unveils Three High-end STRIX Series 7.1-ch Sound Cards
ASUS unveiled two new high-end 7.1-channel sound cards under its premium STRIX brand, the STRIX RAID DLX, the STRIX RAID Pro, and the STRIX Soar. The three are based on a common base card design, and differ with features and DSPs. The DAC component of the card consists of a native-PCIe multi-CODEC HD audio controller, wired to an ESS SABRE 9006a DAC, dedicated to the front audio output, with 116 dBA SNR; and a separate 110 dBA SNR DAC wired to the main headphones amplifier. On the RAID DLX, the front-out DAC is a higher quality SABRE 9016a.
The main amp can handle 600Ω impedance headphones. On the software side of things, is a Raid mode (positional audio), Sonic Radar (lets you pinpoint enemies based on audio, and a new Sonic Studio control panel interface. The RAID DLX and RAID Pro come with an external module with audio jacks, and physical switches to audio feature controls, besides volume control.
The main amp can handle 600Ω impedance headphones. On the software side of things, is a Raid mode (positional audio), Sonic Radar (lets you pinpoint enemies based on audio, and a new Sonic Studio control panel interface. The RAID DLX and RAID Pro come with an external module with audio jacks, and physical switches to audio feature controls, besides volume control.
29 Comments on ASUS Unveils Three High-end STRIX Series 7.1-ch Sound Cards
It looks like crap, and reeks of 10 years old tech... and dafuq that RAID name? Are they seriously retarded messing up proper industry standard names... even with all capital letters...
still. i dont think i'd ever purchase a PCIe soundcard ever again
Most cards from ASUS do have only one of these enabled. Maybe except for headphones, its probably better to send multi-channel sound to your playback device (e.g. a proper AV receiver) in digital form, let alone most AV receivers don't even have multi-channel analog inputs.
An even cooler feature would be the output of uncompressed 7.1 channel sound (PCM) via HDMI, but I guess this is too much to ask for a gamer sound card... ;)
Still, I would not buy an audio card drawing power from the pci bus...
I have no problems with PCI-E cards as long they replicate manufacturer schematics and do not cripple something, they are tweakable more than enough... even the power supply part. My X-Fi HD grandfather still works past 120dB... I can't measure more, do not have any better capture device with good ADC...
And I agree, all sound drivers are utter crap... And actually it is been a tradition since 90ties to be like that.
Oh lol, I only now saw the Soar card lololo I can see my self pranking any mate seeing this thing and telling - I see you have a sore problem in your case...
I miss the card with a tube preamp signal and the higher for HD tone ,32 bit or more converters. Well, when the matter will be listend will be anything to said , because the sound does not for look, but to listen .
I can support the tube thing... the best I've heard is a Sylvania 6SN7GTA (1954) driving an OTL end. But that's another story... each equipment if made correctly, shines on their own... This simply can't do that... Realtek also isn't the best player in driver department too... They all SIN... :respect: But nevertheless... if we pay money... a get crippled driver performace, like broken ASIO, WASAPI stuttering, sampling modes do not stick, they change on their own... While creative is just lazy... a new driver from them is like xmas, their 4GB problem, SSD no sound issue...
Ultra small, so the air could travel freely.
Because it would be reasonable... LoL.
I've saved up for the USB version but would opt for this combination. Also thinking about the Phoebus+Tiamat.
I hate it how Creative was basically forced to take the route of SB Z cards (at least they have it good for old games with ALchemy where they still shine) and I bet you these ASUS cards use the same 15 years old audio processors... It's idiotic.
(Petting my Xonar Essence here. With 3rd-party-drivers ...)
And for the length argument, you're talking PCB traces dammit. It's bloody short is what it is!
You mean digital isn't immune to data loss? LoL wut?
A for the actual audio data, it is likely something similar to the old ROG Phoebus with the control pod running a simple extension of the analog cables - there just isn't any point in duplicating DACs for the tiny improvement it would make.
PS: I'm assuming what btarunr meant by controller was the actual audio controller IC, not the controller pod thing with the knob, which is the only thing that would make sense to have anything to do with PCIe.