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I see it is limited to 24/96, is that correct?
No, 24/192. Here's the Asus spec sheet: http://www.asus.com/Multimedia/Audio_Cards/Xonar_Essence_ST/#specificationsRod
New ASIO drivers also support 88.2 and 176. I use third party UniXonar low latency drivers.
I've been using the UniXonar drivers for quite awhile without problem. Haven't updated in quite awhile though. Have you tried his latest V 1.50? Here's link to the drivers on his blog. http://brainbit.wordpress.com/2010/07/19/asus-xonar-unified-drivers/Rod
Are you saying use this with a dac or as standalone?
Have any of you actually tried it with 88k or 176K files? Acc'd to the spec sheet, in ANALOGUE it doesn't do 88 and 176. Does that mean it does handle them through the SPDIF out?
Guys, if you were going to build a PC based music system around this card (as a total noob who wants quality but knows jack-S), what would you do? And would it be competitive with going the Touch/external dac route?
I'm using the ASUS Essence Sonar STX in the new music pc that I built. I have a nice set of RCA cables taking the audio directly from the Sound Card to my Parasound Pre-amp which hands it off to my Bryston 4B-ST.Beware of the ASUS bloatware. I run the ASUS drivers and I leave "HiFi" mode selected. The sound deteriorates considerably when the ASUS eq's, mixers and DSPs are involved. (Actually, it sounds like crap...HiFi mode avoids that. I'm running JRiver Media Center 16 or 17 and use the WASAPI output. It has better imaging and I think better channel to channel separation than my Denon DCM-390 SACD/redbook CD player that I'm replacing. Instrument placement is MUCH better than the Denon and the instruments don't move around in the soundstage.When I get brave, I'll try the non-ASUS ASIO drivers.HsvHeelFan