Embrace Rejuvenating Slumber: Unveiling the IHome Zenergy Sleep Aid Masterclass
Creative Labs Sound Blaster ZXR Unveiled: Analyzing the 2013 Leading Audio Card
2.8
## Creative Sound Blaster ZxRLifewire / Emily Ramirez
What We Like
- Full-featured EQ Software
- Good Sound
- EQ Presets tailored to Gamers & Film Enthusiasts
What We Don’t Like
- Sound could be better
- EQ on by default
- Requires 2 PCIe slots
- No native 7.1 surround support
- Audio Control Module may cause distortion
The Sound Blaster ZxR is a decent, versatile sound card, but one that’s been outclassed since its 2013 release—for that $250 MSRP you can get better hardware with a better interface or better sound, but the ZxR still has a place for those that love the completeness of the Z-Series software bundle.
2.8
Creative Sound Blaster ZxR
Lifewire / Emily Ramirez
in this article
Expand
- Design
- Hardware
- Setup Process/Installation
- Audio
- Audio: Excellent sound
- Software
- Price
- Final Verdict
- Specs
We purchased the Sound Blaster ZxR so our expert reviewer could thoroughly test and assess it. Keep reading for our full product review.
The Sound Blaster ZxR sound card was a great card in 2013. In 2019, however, the ZxR has started to lag behind the competition. It provides pretty clear audio, but it requires two PCIe slots and costs $250 MSRP. Compare this to products from other audio card manufacturers, such as ASUS and EVGA, which been able to provide better audio performance for as little as $160. That said, the Sound Blaster ZxR isn’t without merits: it has a lot of inputs and outputs, extensive EQ software, and still produces quality sound. It also has features gamers need, such as treble boost and voice isolation, and it accommodates 6.3mm auxiliary input and output.
Lifewire / Emily Ramirez
Design: Sleek and convenient
The Sound Blaster ZxR features a black and red chassis on its main and daughter boards, brightly accented in gold around the transistors and back plate. Together, the cards have enough outputs to natively support a 5.1 surround sound speaker system. They have 2 RCA outputs, 2 3.5mm outputs, two RCA inputs, one optical TOSLINK input, one optical TOSLINK output, one 6.3mm microphone input, and one 6.3 headphone output jack. The ZxR also comes with an Audio Control Module (ACM), which is Creative Labs’ take on an amplifier and on extending the 6.3mm connections. It has both 3.5mm and 6.3mm inputs and outputs so you can choose where you’d like to plug in your headphones and microphone. On the ACM’s face lies a big, plastic volume knob that controls the headphones’ loudness.
Hardware: Some odd decisions
For users who may own higher impedance headphones, the amplifier can comfortably drive headphones with up to a 600 ohm impedance. Unfortunately, the volume control on the ACM works passively by altering the output impedance, which can distort audio on headphones with high inductance like the Sennheiser HD800 (see “How Low Should Output Impedance Be? ”). A better and only slightly more costly solution for Creative Labs would have been to have the knob control the ZxR’s in-built volume control rather than try to do it passively. The HD800 sounded fine when plugged directly into the sound card and using the system volume control.
Lifewire / Emily Ramirez
Setup Process/Installation: Easy install, irritating setup
To install the hardware, we popped open our mid-size PC tower and inserted the sound card and daughter board into two available PCIe slots. Creative Labs had the foresight to build the main card with a PCIe 1x slots, giving the user flexibility in where they connect their cards to the motherboard. Once the cards were secured, we plugged the headphones and microphone into the corresponding jacks.
It’s difficult to recommend the aging ZxR at its inflated $250 MSRP.
Unfortunately, configuring Creative Labs’ drivers and software suite was a much less intuitive process. The ZxR’s outputs are controlled via the Sound Blaster Z-series Software, where users can select whether they’re listening with their headphones or their speakers, apply EQ effects, and more. By default, the software is set to output to speakers with several different EQ effects turned on. We had to manually switch it to headphone output and turn off EQ; the software does not automatically detect which jacks are in use.
Lifewire / Emily Ramirez
Audio: Excellent sound
Once the EQ effects are turned off, the Sound Blaster ZxR provides beautiful sound. While it wasn’t quite as clean or crisp as an enthusiast audiophile amplifier, such as the OPPO HA-1, it was solid for a system that costs a quarter of the HA-1’s price. On the HD-800s, the bass came across slightly muddy, but the ZxR provides solid quality for consumer-grade headphones like the Sennheiser GSP300 or the Sony MDR-7506. As our ourheadphone buying guide suggests, most headphones under $250 will not be sensitive enough to meaningfully distinguish between the ZxR and the HA-1.
Should you happen to own dynamic headphones, you should find their impedance curve. Dynamic headphones with a high impedance may be distorted by the ACM, thanks to the ACM’s high resistance. How your headphones will be affected depends on their impedance curve: for the HD800s, for example, there is a peak at 100Hz (this range captures electric bass and the lower octaves of guitars), so the upper bass range is boosted relative to the other frequencies in the audio. Increasing the volume on the ACM reduces its output resistance and in turn reduces the distortion, but it may be easier to plug equipment directly into the sound card and use the system volume instead.
- Title: Embrace Rejuvenating Slumber: Unveiling the IHome Zenergy Sleep Aid Masterclass
- Author: Scott
- Created at : 2024-08-03 23:03:59
- Updated at : 2024-08-04 23:03:59
- Link: https://buynow-info.techidaily.com/embrace-rejuvenating-slumber-unveiling-the-ihome-zenergy-sleep-aid-masterclass/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.