Monday, August 1, 2011

ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set Review

ASUS Xonar Xense

ASUS Xonar Xense

When you first see the ASUS Xonar Xense EMI shield, you get a sense that this isn’t an ordinary soundcard. The non-ironic end is, you’re right. ASUS has place together another fantastic soundcard and bundled it with a fantastic pair of headset, the Sennheiser PC350 Xense Edition. The ASUS Xonar Xense offers a heap of inputs and outputs, and can chug out high definition audio up to 192kHz/24bit lacking breaking a sweat. ASUS Xonar Xense easily is one of the coolest pieces of hardware you can add to your rig. Need more influential? Continue conception to try out out all of the details of the ASUS Xonar Xense.
Unique thankfulness to ASUS Xonar Xense for providing us with the ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set to assess.
Specifications
Audio Performance
Productivity Indicate-to-Noise Ratio (A Weighted) 118dB for front channel
112dB for additional channels
110dB for earphone out with 600ohm load
Input Indicate-to-Noise Ratio (A Weighted) 118dB
Productivity Total Choral Distortion + Noise @ 1kHz (-3dB) 0.00039% (-108dB) for front channel
0.00063% (-102dB) for additional channels
0.0019% (-94dB) for earphone out with 600ohm load
Input Total Choral Distortion + Noise @ 1kHZ (-3dB) 0.0003% (-110dB) for line-in
Frequency Response (-3dB, 96kHz/24bit) <10Hz to 46kHz
Productivity/Input Full-Extent Voltage 2 Vrms (5.65 Vp-p)
Earphone Productivity Full-Extent Voltage Up to 6.8 Vrms (chains headset up to 600ohms)
Bus Computability
PCI Express PCI Express Rev. 1.0a
Maximum full 2.5Gbps bandwidth per direction and optimized latency for high-definition audio processing
Compatible with X1, X4, X8, X16 PCI Express slots

Try out Rate and Resolution ASUS Xonar Xense

Analog Playback Try out Rate and Resolution 44.1K/48K/96K/192kHz @ 16/24bit
Analog Recording Try out Rate and Resolution 44.1K/48K/96K/192kHz @ 16/24bit
S/PDIF Digital Productivity 44.1K/48K/96K/192kHz @ 16/24bit, Dolby Digital
Main Chipset
Audio Processor ASUS AV100 High-Definition Signal Processor (Max. 192kHz/24bit)
24bit DA Converter of Digital Sources Texas Instruments PCM1796*1 for Front out (123dB SNR, 192kHz/24bit (max))

Cirrus Logic CS4362A*1 for additional 6 channels (114dB SNR, 192kHz/24bit (max))
High Fidelity Earphone Amplifier Texas Instruments 6120A2*1 (120dB SNR, -117dB THD+N @ Vcc±12V, RL=600Ω, f=1kHz)
I/O Ports
Analog Productivity Jack 6.30mm (1/4″) x 1 (earphone out)
7.1ch analog productivity (with bundle audio cable) (1/8″)
Analog Input Jack 6.30mm (1/4″) x 1 (shared by line-in/mic)
Digital S/PDIF Productivity High-bandwidth Coaxial/TOSLINK combo port. Chains 192kHz/24bit).
Additional Line-Level Analog Input (TV Tuner/CD-ROM) Aux-In (4-pin slogan on the card)
Front Panel Shared by earphone out / 2 channels out / mic in

Packaging
The black and blue box with colorless calligraphy will catch your eye, not only because of the design, but because its right side is bulging out! Straight away you know that this isn’t an ordinary soundcard, or some ordinary pair of headset bundled with it. Once you stop and look, you’ll see that this soundcard chains each doable form of surround signal you may possibly need, counting Dolby Earphone, Dolby Prologic IIx, Dolby Digital Live, and Xonar GX2.5. Also, it can administer high definition audio up to 192kHz/24bit. And for all of the professional audio guys and gals out there, the ASUS Xonar Xense chains ASIO 2.0.

ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set
Notch the top flap of the box will grant you with much more fussy in rank in this area the Xonar Xense and the Sennheiser PC350 “Xense” edition headset. Also, you will get your first look at the actual soundcard. Its shiny metal EMI shield which is designed after the cans of the headset. It also has “XENSE” stamped on the EMI shield.
After unpacking everything you’ll find the ASUS Xonar Xense soundcard, the Sennheiser PC350 “Xense” edition headset, the audio splitter for 7.1 channel analog audio (your ordinary 3.5mm, 1/8″ plugs), a 6.5mm (1/4″) to 3.5mm (1/8″) adapter, a unique TOSLINK adapter, and the quick initiation handbook along with the driver and helpfulness CD
A Closer Look
As mentioned before, the ASUS Xonar Xense facial appearance an EMI shield to keep your audio as clean as doable. You’ll also notice that all connectors, even the plugs on the PC350 headset, are gold plated. ASUS has really place a lot of time into this card and hasn’t full any shortcuts whatsoever. The card does demand additional power, so you will need to have an unfilled 4-pin molex plug. Some public force concerned by the lack of ‘traditional’ soundcard 3.5mm (1/8″) jacks, although ASUS has cleverly fit all 4 jacks into a DVI-esque plug. The card comes with the apt adapter to make this doable, and it facility seamlessly. Also, the TOSLINK and coax digital out have been merged into one jack. The center of the coax digital jack glows red, and you can insert the bundled TOSLINK adapter into the hole, then place your TOSLINK cable into the adapter, and voila, you have a multi-functioning port. These equipment force seem trivial, but it really respectable that ASUS was able to contain 1/4″ jacks for headset, mic and line-in, 7.1 channel analog out, and two types of digital productivity all in one confined interval. No additional “front panel” or slots are needed.

ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set
ASUS Xonar Xense
The PC350 Xense edition headset are super comfortable, I felt no ache whatsoever, even after wearing them for 4 or more hours. Also, the built-in mic has incredible clarity. It easily rivals $20 – $30 mics, if not vaguely more high-priced ones. There is a volume control and a mic on/off batter on the cord. These work as probable, even if, the volume control doesn’t go all the way down to mute, it stops at in this area 10%. I found this kind of annoying in view of the fact that I’d have to mute or stop the audio on the notebook, instead of being able to absolutely control it from the headset. Also, the PC350 Xense edition will block out a lot, and I mean a lot of shared class noise. I was really bowled over in this area how well they suppressed environmental sounds. I may possibly barely hear my typing, mouse clicks, or public yelling in the shared class. Especially if you have the volume up a bit, you’re going to be safe and signal in on the signal and nothing else nearly you.

ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set ASUS Xonar Xense Premium Gaming Audio Set
I’ve been through some serious ups and downs with the Sennheiser PC350 Xense edition bundled headset. There were days that I couldn’t stand them, and others when they were quite excellent. My final opinion of them is they are a right high midrange set. In additional words, not terrible enough to be midrange, but not fantastic enough to be a high end set. After my two week long encounter, I’ve concluded that the Sennheiser PC350 Xense edition headset have fantastic mids, clad bass, but lack a lot of highs. These certainly aren’t the best headset to listen to music (which I do a lot of), although they are fantastic for sports meeting and movies. Both sports meeting and movies rely a lot on midrange sounds. You won’t always feel the “blow” of explosions because of the clad bass, but the bright mids will certainly make sure you know the size of the explosion. Also dialog in movies and sports meeting are really mid-based, so the PC350 Xense edition shine with dialog.’

ASUS Xonar Xense




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