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> Will External Sound Card Improve Playback From Itunes And Other Online Music?, Wondering if an external sound card for the iMac Intel will improve so
Sadhu
post Sat 29 Sep 2007, 20:33
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See very little on sound cards for the iMac. While I know that many users purchase sound cards for MacPro desktops, I am wondering if an external sound peripheral will improve the playback sound off my iMac Intel unit ... for sound OTHER THAN the tracks that I record or input INTO such a peripheral. In other words will I hear any improved audio quality if I purchase a good quality external sound card when listing back through my computer ... say through iTunes or through a high quality stream? I'm not concerned about the "value" of $ spent to the amount to improvement. I am simply interested to know if there will be an improvement in over all quality (say more defined bass, or tighther bass, or a more natural sounding midrange and high end?

Anyone have any comments on external sound cards and whether they improve the sound? If so, anyone have any suggestions on what products to look at? I eventually plan to buy a Mac Pro, so I don't mind spending more on good external card if they can be had as an external device for the mac.

Would appreciate any and all comments. Thanks in advance.

- Sadhu
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JonRaven
post Sat 29 Sep 2007, 22:29
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Hello there,

Now it all depends on what level of recording or shall I say perfection level you are shooting for I guess... but from my experience...

Recently I have witnessed on several occasions where a drastic sound quality difference was created whenever the engineer of whatever studio I was in... kicked in some piece of D/A conversion gear and cancelled out the standard mac soundcard feed from the chain.

I was intrigued so I started asking how the quality could increase at such a high rate but when I found out that they all introduced some sort of adat optical out (still digital) to a much better D/A converter (the actual conversion of the analog) into their computer to speakers world.

Such as top level types like the ones offered by apogee or similar level, but a close step down if you want to spend your budget on "ins" and worrying about "outs" later... would be a motu HD or something of similar build. Motu offers a pretty high end D/A for the more budget minded in their HD interfaces.

Just my thoughts but if you are a studio these days who has as much care about what is going "in" the computer as at what is coming "out" of it... I would invest in a good D/A converter. Yeah so you have the best conversion going "in"... but if you can't hear what went in... then ..well... you get my drift.

Anyways... my 2 cents as the general public can not hear any real difference in a lot of D/A conversion let alone A/D.

Now if you are talking about general priced ok listening and not so much recording perfection... then there are many cheaper options there as well.

Hope that helps a little?

Cheers.
huh.gif

This post has been edited by JonRaven: Sat 29 Sep 2007, 22:30
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Sadhu
post Sun 30 Sep 2007, 14:55
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Thanks for the reply. Actually, my question (or questions) relate to playback. I do not doubt that high quality sound card will be worth the investment for me for recording music.

I would rather draw attention away from concerns about input, and purely discuss the output from this Intel iMac (the white one ... the last version before the new aluminum and glass model that just appeard a few weeks ago - - and for my purposes, I am happy not to have the new reflective screen ... God bless everyone who is happy with them).

Yes, my interest is with PLAYBACK, and ... of course, I don't doubt that better sound card will improve the quality of sound when listening to high quality recordings. I've already encountered this on the Windows PC. I have very little knowledge of the ins and out (excuse the pun) of the design of the iMac and the interaction of the digital sound card in it, and am curious to know that if I plug in a high quality sound card, will, for example, I improve the quality of playback on a commercial audiophile store bought recording that I'm listening to on the Mac ...out of iTunes or Logic or say even a higher quality stream. My Creative Labs Audigy card is external to my Windows PC (and of course, there are better brands of both internal and external cards that do a better job), but even with my Creative Labs card, I do experience higher quality sound through high quality headphones than I do when listening to the iMac. Of course, again, I don't know if what I am hearing is just a better headphone preamp, or a better impedance match with the headphones, or a lesser than ideal situation of such a match on the mac. On the pc, I would suspect it's the internal card. However with the iMac, the external card route is all one has.

So I am wondering, friends, since I can't introduce an internal sound card into the iMac, if using an external sound card will produce similar types of improvement to the sound that I'm hearing on the pc side, specifically with iTunes, or commerical disc playback or high quality streams ... such as sometimes come out of France or Germany, or in some cases, some of the newer HD radio stations in the USA. Will the EXTERNAL sound card help that ... in any way?

Again, I'm not concerned with VALUE for the dollar discussions, or and not concerned with whether such investments are really worth undertaking for the for the type of improvement one receives. Obviously there are differences between cards, and obviously they cost a lot (so do good headphones), and so I'd like to table that aspect of the conversation, and JUST ASK if any of you know that it WILL or WON'T be a factor to improving the quality of the sound. Does it? And if so, do any of you have an experience with any specific card manufacturers?

That's really the area that I hope some of you will comment on. Thanks in advance for reading this thread!
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mortalengines
post Mon 1 Oct 2007, 05:59
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I just have a 3 to 4 year old G4 powerbook and while I can't attest to the I-book's quality, I bought an Echo Indigo card for mine and basically wasted my money. The Powerbook's output was not noticeably different with the Indigo in place. Windows notebooks have really crappy sound apparatus installed. I actually perform with my laptop and just use the headphone outs.



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This post has been edited by mortalengines: Mon 1 Oct 2007, 06:01
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mortalengines
post Tue 2 Oct 2007, 00:25
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Back to your question though, if you are still not happy with your iMac's sound output....PreSonus and M-audio make good USB interfaces for under 200 dollars. The Echo Indigo PCIMA card I discussed in my previous post was around 179 bucks 3 years ago when I bought it.
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minskybabs
post Tue 2 Oct 2007, 10:34
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Hi there, my thoughts, for what they are worth, is that yes an external audio interface "can" improve the playback from itunes and other online music. As the other people have suggested the conversion from digital to analogue, D/A will often be better, but, and here's the catch only on some interfaces and only on some sources. A very cheap intrerface will probably not be noticeably better than the built in, but an expensive one almost certainly would be. try before you buy if you can. Take in a digital file and play back through a shop mac and then compare same file through an interface. As people have suggested MOTU, RME, Apogee, various prices and generally the more you pay the better you get, up to a point.

Other factors, some audio files are poor in the first place, no amount of mioney will make a lo fi recording sound hi fi, but you appear to be talking about high quality recordings, so you should see improvements. Your other point about headphone impedences could also be a factor, but this is why try before you buy is good. Or get a dedicated headphone pre amp too. Though that is yet more bucks!

Good luck.
Minskybabs
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Sadhu
post Tue 2 Oct 2007, 19:30
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QUOTE (minskybabs @ Tue 2 Oct 2007, 05:34) *
Hi there, my thoughts, for what they are worth, is that yes an external audio interface "can" improve the playback from itunes and other online music. As the other people have suggested the conversion from digital to analogue, D/A will often be better, but, and here's the catch only on some interfaces and only on some sources. A very cheap intrerface will probably not be noticeably better than the built in, but an expensive one almost certainly would be. try before you buy if you can. Take in a digital file and play back through a shop mac and then compare same file through an interface. As people have suggested MOTU, RME, Apogee, various prices and generally the more you pay the better you get, up to a point.

Other factors, some audio files are poor in the first place, no amount of mioney will make a lo fi recording sound hi fi, but you appear to be talking about high quality recordings, so you should see improvements. Your other point about headphone impedences could also be a factor, but this is why try before you buy is good. Or get a dedicated headphone pre amp too. Though that is yet more bucks!

Good luck.
Minskybabs


Thanks for your comments. I trust you understood that I was playing back via the iMac into the external device be it MOTU, RME, or Apogee ... which ever I end up buying. I will not doubt buy a good external box for use for RECORDING and not just playback. I quite understand many of the factors about recording and do know that you can turn make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. I am somewhat experienced in recording in Analog having gone to Eastman School of Music's school of Recording during the 1970s and having run a 24 Track Analog recording studio in the 70s, and many of the recording principals for Analog still apply to the world of Digital. So I do understand your point about poor audio files remaining poor audio files, and likewise about heaphone impediences. It's somewhat difficult to try before I buy here in the Greater Buffalo area as none of the stores that I know of have live setups for digital gear they sell and even if they did, probably most of them would already be using a Mac Pro and not an iMac since it's not the appropropriate piece of gear for professional recording ... the Mac Pro Desktop is. Again, my interest was in buying an external device for use the iMac that could eventually use when I buy a Mac Pro, which I intend to do. Hence my question regarding whether the external card would improve the sound of the iMac playback.

I am surprised actually to hear that you think it will. Many people have told me it would not improve the sound and that it would be complete and total waste of money in relation to use with the iMac. I do think it would enable higher quality recordings on the iMac but that I wouldn't necessary hear any difference on the iMac when it came to playback. That this would only be possible on the Mac Pro.

You are the first one to suggest that I could gain some benefit from the external sound device with regard to PLAYBACK on the iMac. Thanks for taking the time to reply.

- Sadhu


"I quite understand many of the factors about recording and do know that you can turn make a silk purse out of a sow's ear."

Obviously, I meant to say that "YOU CAN'T make a silk purse out of sow's ear!"

and would hope that you realized that's what I meant.
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deaconblue
post Wed 3 Oct 2007, 03:37
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Sadhu,

For the iMac you reference (iMac Late 2006) the audio out ports have the following specs:

"The headphone / line output jack accommodates both digital optical audio output and analog audio output with a 24-bit, 16-96 kHz D/A converter."

If you purchase any external device, 1/8" analog, FireWire, USB or the digital audio interface, as long as the device's specifications are better than these you will have superior audio quality using an external interface over the internal. If you use a device with lower combined specifications, you will not achieve the goal you are attempting.

Regardless of those factors, any MP3 or other MPEG/Compressed stream, audio source file that you play on any computer will result in sound degradation as there is no such thing as loss-less compression. I would consider the sound source file to be your primary limiting factor in achieving audiophile representation on any computer.

I have success with a MOTU 828 via FireWire producing better quality audio output than my built in, not because of better specifications, but because of a cleaner signal path and better impedance/ability to more properly drive my headphones.

Hope this helps.

peace.

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Sadhu
post Wed 3 Oct 2007, 13:39
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QUOTE (deaconblue @ Tue 2 Oct 2007, 22:37) *
Sadhu,

For the iMac you reference (iMac Late 2006) the audio out ports have the following specs:

"The headphone / line output jack accommodates both digital optical audio output and analog audio output with a 24-bit, 16-96 kHz D/A converter."

If you purchase any external device, 1/8" analog, FireWire, USB or the digital audio interface, as long as the device's specifications are better than these you will have superior audio quality using an external interface over the internal. If you use a device with lower combined specifications, you will not achieve the goal you are attempting.

Regardless of those factors, any MP3 or other MPEG/Compressed stream, audio source file that you play on any computer will result in sound degradation as there is no such thing as loss-less compression. I would consider the sound source file to be your primary limiting factor in achieving audiophile representation on any computer.

I have success with a MOTU 828 via FireWire producing better quality audio output than my built in, not because of better specifications, but because of a cleaner signal path and better impedance/ability to more properly drive my headphones.

Hope this helps.

peace.

deacon


Thank you for comments, Deacon. they are encouraging and helpful. Let me ask, at the risk of sounding silly, and if you don't mind saying, what headphones you use? I have many different makes and models myself, Grado, Beyer, AKG, and Sennheisser. I'm afraid my recording teachers forced me to learn to listen through as many transducers as possible when recording, and the habits of checking out various recordings of others on different transducers has stuck with me over the years. I find no one brand ends up being best suited to all recordings ... although some are more comfortable to wear than others.

So, anyway taking into account that certain headphones sometimes are more fitting for speficic combinations of instruments (rather than genre), may ask if there is a particular match up or match-ups you have heard with the Moto and liked with the Moto? The Moto matchup and your match is what I'd be interested in here.

I have found that what I've been hearing and disliking on the iMac comes from comparing the SAME source material on both Windows and iMac using the same headphones. I have tried different headphones too, but haven't a record of how their impedances varry. Pretty much the same results throughout. This is what led to me ask about external cards. However, this result, as you say is still as likely to be impediance and the proper matchup of output and headphones as anything else. So thanks for that for that reminder.

Do you listen to regular transducers (loudspeakers) as well as headphones from the output of Moto (into additional pre-amp/ampliers) If so, with what result? Perhaps you have a high quality set of powered speakers. I have a set of powered studio quality self-powered speakers KRK V8s, which are normally hooked up to my keyboards, but have yet to bring them down to listen the iMac. Your answer isn't going to reveal any absolutes, this much I know, but I am curious nonetheless if you've listended out of the moto through any loudspeakers.

Thanks again, deacon.
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deaconblue
post Thu 4 Oct 2007, 02:29
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Sadhu,

No worries. That is what these forums are all about. Helping each other out. AND, I must state there are far more brilliant minds on here than I (le petit martien, macdaddy, mortalengines to name just a very few of those who have helped out on many topics over time).

I use the MOTU 828 with the following: a Sony reference headphone (Sony Pro MDR-7506), the Audio-Technica ATH-M40ƒs, the AKG K-55s and the Sennheiser HD280 Pro. I also listen to the sound source from a pair of JBL 4408s driven by a Hafler TA1100 amp.

And I agree, different loudspeakers and headphone produce different frequencies better and are therefore better suited to different music types. But I try to get both speakers and headphones that add as little color as possible to my sounds since I use them primarily to mix and master various works. If it sound good in the cans, it may not sound good on a set of speakers. But if it sounds good in both (reference sets specifically) it may not sound good in your car or even your home stereo. I try to push the sound through as many sources as possible before I settle on a final mix. The outs of my MOTU also run to my stereo (Technics SA-300 [about 28 years old]) and then into either a matched set of Technics speakers (same vintage) or my Polk Audio reference monitors. This way I get a good range of tonal 'validations' before I get the final sound.

Also, I agree that this response, nor any other on this forum re: this specific topic, will produce any absolutes for you, but they should guide you to make a better informed decision.

I wish you luck in making the purchase. Spend as much as you can on your gear so it will last you a lot longer. But, once you make the jump, have no regrets. There is always going to be something newer and/or better out there. Just get what sounds best to your ears. That is what truly matters.

peace.
deacon

This post has been edited by deaconblue: Thu 4 Oct 2007, 02:30


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