Sound Type | Surround |
---|---|
Interface Type | PCI Express |
Number of channels | 7.1 |
Width | 0.87 in |
---|---|
Depth | 7.48 in |
Height | 5.12 in |
Weight | 16.93 oz |
Remote control | yes |
---|---|
Support for ASIO | yes |
Analog 3.5mm output | 4 |
---|---|
Analogue RCA outputs | 0 |
Headphone output | yes |
Headphone output (3.5 mm) | 1 |
Headphone output (6.3 mm / 1/4) | 0 |
Headphone outputs | 5 |
Jack Plug input | 0 |
Jack Plug output (6,3 mm / 1/4) | 0 |
Microphone input | yes |
Microphone Jack Plug (3.5mm) | 1 |
Line-in | yes |
S/PDIF out port | yes |
Other connectors |
|
USB | no |
Placement Type | Internal |
---|
Noise level (SNR) | 110.0 dB |
---|---|
Line-out Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) | 116.0 dB |
D/A audio | 24 bit / 384 kHz |
Audio quality | 24.0 bit |
Asus had unveiled three new game-oriented sound cards to its owl-themed Strix family at Computex last year. They are the Strix Raid DLX, Strix Raid Pro and Strix Soar. Recently I got to review the Strix Raid Pro. According to Asus, Strix Raid Pro is a premium sound card built with audiophile-grade components to satisfy […]
If you take audio seriously then the onboard processing on many motherboards simply wont deliver an
We tested the ASUS Strix Raid PRO audio card to see if it lives up to the hype. What we found is an attractive piece of hardware with a slew of useful features, squarely aimed at gamers.
Strix Raid Pro
The STRIX RAID DLX soundcard is the top offering of the STRIX line-up, promising a 124dB SNR for audiophile grade HiFi sound and on-the-fly in-game audio adjustments.
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