I've got a SB card right now. It is bottom of the food chain and I'm wondering if a new sound card will get the final mixes of my music to a better level. tia
Since I am unlikely to get back to this thread at some point in the near future I will just provide WAAY too much information, though damn few recommendations.
You no doubt know well that a 'soundcard' moves your analog signal to the digital domain. All of the soundcards that I am aware of connect via the PCI bus, FireWire/1394, S/PDIF, or USB. Naturally, your PC must have one of these interfaces.
Many soundcards... though not all... provide preamps. If you need a preamp, make sure your soundcard provides it. Likewise some of the those soundcards that provide preamps also provide phantom power. So if you have the aspiration of one day owning a somewhat decent condenser microphone you should make sure that your soundcard has a preamp with phantom power.
Thirdly, some microphones are notoriously difficult to 'drive' with anything other than (relatively) decent preamps. For example, the preamps on my old Mackie board will NOT drive
my Shure SM7B, nor would a friends Roland all-in-one standalone setup. He thought the mic was broken. No. His setup just had inadequate preamps.
So... bottom line... what you buy depends on your current microphones, your aspirations, and your budget.
All of what follows are examples of 'soundcards' in that they all move analog to digital. Some, of course, are much much more as part of the bargain.
S/PDIF
PCI
FireWire/1394
USB
Now please appreciate... if you win the lottery... that there are even higher end audio interfaces and soundcards.
Personally, I use the Alesis IO/2 (discontinued) and it has been a
very sweet interface indeed. The preamps drive my SM7B and it gives me all that I need for my projects (VO). Spend the time, peruse the sites, read the reviews. Lots of good stuff out there.
Or... you could just wimp out and get a M-Audio 2496. I can't
believe that dinosaur is still out there!