Home » Archives » February 2005 » What? Speak Up!

[Previous entry: "This is where we keep our notes, how to's, and workarounds"] [Next entry: "Would You Like a Server With That?"]


Wednesday, February 9th

What? Speak Up!  - or

SoundBlaster Sound Card Problems

category: hardware

When your Sound Blaster sound card simply ceases to make sound, and it happens, just replace it with a Hercules Game Theater XP 6.1 or 7.1 soundcard, and you'll be far and away better off. For less than half the price, the Game Theater comes with an external desktop rack, like SB Audigy 2 EX, giving easy access to the audio connectors, game port, and 4 high speed USB ports.

One morning, for no apparent reason, my sound card ceased to make sound. It was a Sound Blaster Live, no more than six months old, installed in a desktop computer of the same age. I had never broken a sound card before, so it took me a while to admit that I really had a problem. First I rebooted from Windows 2000 into Windows 98, where I had been playing a flight simulation the night before; I still had no sound. Then from Windows 98 I did the uninstall and reinstall drivers dance. No help. Then I open the case and moved the sound card to a different PCI slot. I repeated the driver dance while periodically checking both Windows 98 and Windows 2000 for signs of success. All of this flailing achieved nothing.

I searched the Internet, called a few friends, and sent a few e-mails. The best anyone else could come up with was some kind of mystical connection to my running a double boot. That's possible, but I've been running the double boot for years; nowadays I no longer double install applications into the same directory as I did with NT 4.0 and Windows 95, not with 40 Gig hard drives; besides, the moose applications such as Microsoft Office won't work anymore with a double install into the same directory. Oh well, I went out and bought a new SoundBlaster Live and installed it. Not a peep. I moved the card to a different PCI slot. Still nothing. I began, irrationally, to twitch again about the double boot. I had a copy of Windows XP Pro, so I installed it in a new NTFS partition and was able to scratch multiboot problems off the list because the sound card still didn't work.

I returned the new SoundBlaster Live and tried an SB AWE 32 ISA card from the old stuff box; when that failed I began to think that my motherboard had gone south, but everything else worked. If, I reasoned, the SoundBlaster PCI card and the SoundBlaster ISA card, manufactured some seven years earlier, aren't different enough to work around this unknown problem -- I was pretty strung out by this time --maybe I needed a new chip set. I went shopping for a Turtle Beach sound card. That's when I found the Hercules. It worked.

Not only did the Hercules work, but it worked better. Games, simulations, and music all sounded better. On Windows 2000, my sound editing software and Dragon dictation software both required tweaking to the configuration, but performance improved dramatically, and I now have the desktop rack.

Entry Author

He said on 02.09.05 @ 12:25 PM CST


Notes to readers:
This is a printer friendly page.

More on this general topic, or any other, can easily be found by clicking on the links in the Search by Category section of the sidebar. Highly specific, or cross topic searches can be performed by entering key words in the Search by Keyword form in the sidebar.

Readers with Internet Explorer can use these links to "Add to Favorites."

Click here to add this page to your favorites!
Click here to add this site to your favorites!

Remember, these Awesome Tips and Tricks are also provided by the other members of our back office staff. Awesomely Active Web Design, located in Chicago, creates and extends web sites with focus on e-business applications and custom design. Oh, the guys in the front office want us to remind you to check out our services links because we do, after all, do this stuff for a living.

Awesome Services