Support |
In every field, there tend to be fantastic deals on gear that gives the most bang for the buck. In percussion, for example you could, for years, buy a certain brand of the budget CP conga that would be as good as the professional (and highly overpriced) LP congas. Sure, the LPs were Cadillacs and had the heavy duty 'comfort rims', but, essentially, the budget conga produced completely professional sound at half the budget. The reputation of these cheap congas got so good that LP (CP's parent company) quit making the congas in Natural Wood colors (the most popular conga color) just to force professional drummers on a budget to buy the more expensive ones and , eventually, they phased the cheaper ones out altogether to eliminate the competition. Are there any similar stellar deals in Audio cards for PCs (running Win XP)? Or does one have to buy the bullet and plunk down the big bucks for boxes like the RME ones? Do the latest M Audio cards really tank heavily when compared to the pricier sound cards? Are there PCI cards that sound comparable to more pricey breakout boxes? Is anything made for the Prosumer Gamers of the world that are close in fidelity to the most expensive breakout boxes? ****************************************** I'm building a second PC desktop so that my wife and I can both work, simultaneously on our respective album projects and I don't have an unlimited budget. I picked up a Mackie ONXY satellite system that got good reviews and I got it hella cheap. Now my funky old Creative Labs sound card seems to be biting the dust. I'm wondering if I should buy a second ONXY while they are still available and relatively inexpensive (around $175). *All you audiophile pros out there: what are your recommendations?* *What's the best bang for the buck, financially, for a Sound Card for a PC these days (including older gear that is no longer made but still readily available through places like E Bay)? What can you recommend for a person who loves to live a champagne lifestyle on a beer budget? *