Jump to content

Soundcards. Why?

Guest

What is a reason I would want a sound card in my computer? Are they just for HTPC's? Would they serve any useful purpose in gaming? I obviously don't have to have one. I have sound from my motherboard. Thank you.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Honestly, unless your a sound fanatic and need to hear every single little hz and ohm, you are fine with your onboard sound. 

Community Standards | Fan Control Software

Please make sure to Quote me or @ me to see your reply!

Just because I am a Moderator does not mean I am always right. Please fact check me and verify my answer. 

 

"Black Out"

Ryzen 9 5900x | Full Custom Water Loop | Asus Crosshair VIII Hero (Wi-Fi) | RTX 3090 Founders | Ballistix 32gb 16-18-18-36 3600mhz 

1tb Samsung 970 Evo | 2x 2tb Crucial MX500 SSD | Fractal Design Meshify S2 | Corsair HX1200 PSU

 

Dedicated Streaming Rig

 Ryzen 7 3700x | Asus B450-F Strix | 16gb Gskill Flare X 3200mhz | Corsair RM550x PSU | Asus Strix GTX1070 | 250gb 860 Evo m.2

Phanteks P300A |  Elgato HD60 Pro | Avermedia Live Gamer Duo | Avermedia 4k GC573 Capture Card

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

There once was a time when on board audio was bad and incapable of providing enough power for specific high quality headphones.

 

By and large that time has passed, and unless you have one of the really really gamery non-alc audio solutions, if your on board is capable of driving your headphones to a volume you are comfortable with, you probably don't want/need a sound card.

LINK-> Kurald Galain:  The Night Eternal 

Top 5820k, 980ti SLI Build in the World*

CPU: i7-5820k // GPU: SLI MSI 980ti Gaming 6G // Cooling: Full Custom WC //  Mobo: ASUS X99 Sabertooth // Ram: 32GB Crucial Ballistic Sport // Boot SSD: Samsung 850 EVO 500GB

Mass SSD: Crucial M500 960GB  // PSU: EVGA Supernova 850G2 // Case: Fractal Design Define S Windowed // OS: Windows 10 // Mouse: Razer Naga Chroma // Keyboard: Corsair k70 Cherry MX Reds

Headset: Senn RS185 // Monitor: ASUS PG348Q // Devices: Note 10+ - Surface Book 2 15"

LINK-> Ainulindale: Music of the Ainur 

Prosumer DYI FreeNAS

CPU: Xeon E3-1231v3  // Cooling: Noctua L9x65 //  Mobo: AsRock E3C224D2I // Ram: 16GB Kingston ECC DDR3-1333

HDDs: 4x HGST Deskstar NAS 3TB  // PSU: EVGA 650GQ // Case: Fractal Design Node 304 // OS: FreeNAS

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

I use my computers orange Digital output plug. I run that into a Sony receiver and out to stereo speakers and my subwoofer. It sounds fine to me. Would a good soundcard make it noticeably better?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

there's a few reasons why you'd want a sound card:

- on-board audio does not suffice for your super fancy headphones.

- need more than one sound card

- need a specific type of connector that on-board audio does not have. (optical out, the bigger audio jacks, etc.)

- need a higher quality signal (not for plebs, talking studio use here)

- on-board audio died (the jack is iffy, the chip plain died, other irregularities)

 

mostly, if you dont know if you need an add-in sound card, you dont need one.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Thread212 said:

Well.. its true. nowadays onboard sound card in modern motherboard is pretty well built.

 

The video you linked says they are similar to separate DAC and Amps, right?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

They all sound little different. Thats about it. I am sure those more expensive ones will give u better sound than your mobo but human hearing still sucks to notice any significant difference. Not sure I would want to run some super high end speakers or headphones from onboard audio though. 

And then there are AMPs and DACs that improve the sound quality/output strength.

Connection200mbps / 12mbps 5Ghz wifi

My baby: CPU - i7-4790, MB - Z97-A, RAM - Corsair Veng. LP 16gb, GPU - MSI GTX 1060, PSU - CXM 600, Storage - Evo 840 120gb, MX100 256gb, WD Blue 1TB, Cooler - Hyper Evo 212, Case - Corsair Carbide 200R, Monitor - Benq  XL2430T 144Hz, Mouse - FinalMouse, Keyboard -K70 RGB, OS - Win 10, Audio - DT990 Pro, Phone - iPhone SE

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

26 minutes ago, legacy99 said:

Honestly, unless your a sound fanatic and need to hear every single little hz and ohm, you are fine with your onboard sound. 

You don't hear Hz or ohms..... That literally makes no sense.

 

Sound cards are not really needed today.

n0ah1897, on 05 Mar 2014 - 2:08 PM, said:  "Computers are like girls. It's whats in the inside that matters.  I don't know about you, but I like my girls like I like my cases. Just as beautiful on the inside as the outside."

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

I am one of the few who still need a dedicated sound card. The only reason is that I prefer to use the DTS Connect over optical cable in conjunction with the software that Creative has for getting sound to my home theater system. Sure, I could use the analogue outputs (even on the onboard sound) and pick up a bunch of interference in the walls and ceiling running it across the room to the receiver, but I find it much more convenient to use an audio cable and DTS C to do the job. Sounds nice and clean to boot.

 

If you're not doing this, I can't imagine why spending anything for a sound card would really be worth it.

HEDT: i9 10980XE @ 4.9 gHz, 64GB @ 3600mHz CL14 G.Skill Trident-Z DDR4, 2x Nvidia Titan RTX NVLink SLI, Corsair AX1600i, Samsung 960 Pro 2TB OS/apps, Samsung 850 EVO 4TB media, LG 38GL950G-B monitor, Drop CTRL keyboard, Decus Respec mouse

Laptop: Razer Blade Pro 2019 9750H model, 32GB @ 3200mHz CL18 G.Skill Ripjaws DDR4, 2x Samsung 960 Pro 1TB RAID0, repasted with Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut
Gaming Rig: i9 9900ks @ 5.2ghz, 32GB @ 4000mHz CL17 G.Skill Trident-Z DDR4, EVGA RTX 2080 Ti Kingpin, Corsair HX1200, Samsung 970 EVO Plus 2TB, Asus PG348Q monitor, Corsair K70 LUX RGB keyboard, Corsair Ironclaw mouse
HTPC: i7 7700 (delidded + LM), 16GB @ 2666mHz CL15 Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4, MSI Geforce GTX 1070 Gaming X, Corsair SFX 600, Samsung 850 Pro 512gb, Samsung Q55R TV, Filco Majestouch Convertible 2 TKL keyboard, Logitech G403 wireless mouse

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, Kalm_Traveler1 said:

Sure, I could use the analogue outputs (even on the onboard sound) and pick up a bunch of interference in the walls and ceiling running it across the room to the receiver

That's what cable shielding is for.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, legacy99 said:

Honestly, unless your a sound fanatic and need to hear every single little hz and ohm, you are fine with your onboard sound. 

This comment is wrong on so many levels...

2 hours ago, Emma Nieuwenhuis said:

I use my computers orange Digital output plug. I run that into a Sony receiver and out to stereo speakers and my subwoofer. It sounds fine to me. Would a good soundcard make it noticeably better?

no. 

28 minutes ago, Emma Nieuwenhuis said:

That's what cable shielding is for.

Or balanced cables. Balanced cables are better :)

Hey! New SIgnature! 

 

I'm supposedly a person on the Internet, but you'll never know if I'm human or not ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Quick general answer: If you hear a constant buzzing/humming noise when you plugged your headphones in your motherboard or you can't get it loud enough, get a sound card(external amp/dac is better).

Spoiler

CPU: i7 5930k  |  Motherboard: EVGA X99 Classified  |  RAM: 32 GB Crucial DDR4  |  GPU:  R9 290 Reference Tri-Crossfire w/Kraken g10 mod  | Case: Corsair 780t  |  Storage: Sandisk 960GB SSD, Crucial 960GB SSD, 128GB Sandisk SSD, Seagate 2TB Hard Drive, Seagate Archive Drive 8TB, HGST Deskstar 4TB  |  PSU: Rosewill Gold Lightning-1300, Display(s): Nixeus Vue 24"144Hz FreeSync, 50in TV, Yiynova MVP22U(V3) Tablet Monitor w/ Mechanical Arm  |  Cooling: Cosair H55, H105, 2*Kraken X41  |  Keyboard:  Rosewill Mechanical Brown Keyboard| Mouse: MX Master, G602  | Sound:  Sennheiser HD 700, Westone W40, SoundBlaster e5, Fiio e18

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, iLoiter said:

Quick general answer: If you hear a constant buzzing/humming noise when you plugged your headphones in your motherboard or you can't get it loud enough, get a sound card(external amp/dac is better).

Which is why sound cards are pretty much pointless...

Hey! New SIgnature! 

 

I'm supposedly a person on the Internet, but you'll never know if I'm human or not ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

because @Emma Nieuwenhuis......

#OVERKILL

****SORRY FOR MY ENGLISH IT'S REALLY TERRIBLE*****

Been married to my wife for 3 years now! Yay!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Emma Nieuwenhuis said:

That's what cable shielding is for.

Sure, but the run from the wall plate near my PC to the wall plate near the AVR is about 35 feet. Running 6 analogue low-power cables that far through the walls and ceiling is not going to sound as clear as an all-digital signal, nevermind the much higher cost and extra pain in the rear of running 6 copper-wire cables VS 1 optical cable :)

HEDT: i9 10980XE @ 4.9 gHz, 64GB @ 3600mHz CL14 G.Skill Trident-Z DDR4, 2x Nvidia Titan RTX NVLink SLI, Corsair AX1600i, Samsung 960 Pro 2TB OS/apps, Samsung 850 EVO 4TB media, LG 38GL950G-B monitor, Drop CTRL keyboard, Decus Respec mouse

Laptop: Razer Blade Pro 2019 9750H model, 32GB @ 3200mHz CL18 G.Skill Ripjaws DDR4, 2x Samsung 960 Pro 1TB RAID0, repasted with Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut
Gaming Rig: i9 9900ks @ 5.2ghz, 32GB @ 4000mHz CL17 G.Skill Trident-Z DDR4, EVGA RTX 2080 Ti Kingpin, Corsair HX1200, Samsung 970 EVO Plus 2TB, Asus PG348Q monitor, Corsair K70 LUX RGB keyboard, Corsair Ironclaw mouse
HTPC: i7 7700 (delidded + LM), 16GB @ 2666mHz CL15 Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4, MSI Geforce GTX 1070 Gaming X, Corsair SFX 600, Samsung 850 Pro 512gb, Samsung Q55R TV, Filco Majestouch Convertible 2 TKL keyboard, Logitech G403 wireless mouse

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

There's also one reason why people buy additional audio equipment,for microphones

 

Motherboard's can't give us enough voltage for microphones (Not talking about USB ones but XLR microphones)

 

Microphones with XLR require a minimum of 4.5V to sound like anything,and 48v to sound loud and at full

 

So people buy Audio-Interfaces,Phantom Power Supplies etc...

 

As for the topic,the topic about do you need a sound card,the answer is Yes and No,depends on you,your needs

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

43 minutes ago, keNNySOC said:

There's also one reason why people buy additional audio equipment,for microphones

 

Motherboard's can't give us enough voltage for microphones (Not talking about USB ones but XLR microphones)

 

Microphones with XLR require a minimum of 4.5V to sound like anything,and 48v to sound loud and at full

 

So people buy Audio-Interfaces,Phantom Power Supplies etc...

 

As for the topic,the topic about do you need a sound card,the answer is Yes and No,depends on you,your needs

That's a claim for an audio interface, not a sound card. Consumer sound cards do not generally support phantom power.

Hey! New SIgnature! 

 

I'm supposedly a person on the Internet, but you'll never know if I'm human or not ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

4 minutes ago, KaminKevCrew said:

That's a claim for an audio interface, not a sound card. Consumer sound cards do not generally support phantom power.

Did you even read my post? 

 

49 minutes ago, keNNySOC said:

As for the topic,the topic about do you need a sound card,the answer is Yes and No,depends on you,your needs

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, samiscool51 said:

because @Emma Nieuwenhuis......

#OVERKILL

It's not overkill, if I use my headphones with onboard they are too quiet as they require higher power than most. Having some of the additional hardware level controls and features is a bonus too.

 

A good soundcard with a strong amplifier is usually about the same price as any mid-range headphone amplifier, so if you don't plan on taking an amp around with you a soundcard is a much better deal.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

@DreamcastFan

meh! some think it's overkilll, some think it's useless, some think it's useful

it's personal preference.

****SORRY FOR MY ENGLISH IT'S REALLY TERRIBLE*****

Been married to my wife for 3 years now! Yay!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Just now, samiscool51 said:

@DreamcastFan

meh! some think it's overkilll, some think it's useless, some think it's useful

it's personal preference.

It's not a preference if you have high impedance headphones, they are unusable without amps for me because they are very, very quiet otherwise.

 

Like I say for me the price of an OK desktop headphone amp was almost as much as my Xonar Essence STX so the choice was easy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

@DreamcastFan

see? personal preference. you want to use high impedance headphones but intergreated sound in the MB makes it quiet so you got a sound card to make it louder!

****SORRY FOR MY ENGLISH IT'S REALLY TERRIBLE*****

Been married to my wife for 3 years now! Yay!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

36 minutes ago, samiscool51 said:

@DreamcastFan

see? personal preference. you want to use high impedance headphones but intergreated sound in the MB makes it quiet so you got a sound card to make it louder!

No I just wanted to use some higher end headphones and my options were a bit limited because most of them had higher impedance :P 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Just now, DreamcastFan said:

No I just wanted to use some higher end headphones and my options were a bit limited because most of them had higher impedance :P 

lol

****SORRY FOR MY ENGLISH IT'S REALLY TERRIBLE*****

Been married to my wife for 3 years now! Yay!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

40 minutes ago, DreamcastFan said:

It's not a preference if you have high impedance headphones, they are unusable without amps for me because they are very, very quiet otherwise.

 

Like I say for me the price of an OK desktop headphone amp was almost as much as my Xonar Essence STX so the choice was easy

impedance has nothing to do with how loud a pair of headphones get. Please learn something about audio before making these ridiculous, misleading assertions!

Hey! New SIgnature! 

 

I'm supposedly a person on the Internet, but you'll never know if I'm human or not ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×