X-Fi XtremeAudio Mods

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I know, this card is crap. But I have it, and want to make it better. Already replaced the op amp for stereo (don't use the surround), now I've come upon a nice Elna 6.3v 1000uF cap from a dead Laserdisc player that I'd like to replace the X-Fi's power filter cap with. Anyone know where, on the card, it is?
 
Noooo, I don't mean all SB cards are crap. I've had many amazing SB cards. Not as good as my old Diamond MX300 (which I would be using if it was here), but this particular card is not what they say it is. The X-Fi ExtremeAudio is actually a rebadged Audigy SE, which is far inferior to the other X-Fi cards.
It's crap because it's not what you thought you were paying for. I bought the card at a high price when it was brand new thinking it was an X-Fi. That made a lot of people mad.

Anyways, I did the mod with a different cap (10v 1000uf Elsa from the Laserdisc player's power supply), and it works great. Deeper bass from my speakers (random Technics/Pioneer boxes with 8-in woofers, smaller tweeter and mid connected to a recently cleaned Technics SU-8600) and more defined highs...it's all just punchier.

What's next? What other fruits will the gutted Laserdisc player bear?
 
I also had a Chaintech AV-710 that I was dumb enough to give away (still trying to figure out why) which was far superior but about $50 cheaper at the time. It's not a bad card--it's just terrible for the how much it cost when it was new; especially considering that the card it is based on (which Creative did NOT tell you it was based on) was around $30 less.

Next mods will be on an old Aztech ISA sound/modem card. It's got an Analog Devices chip, a Yamaha OPL, and the modem section is all Rockwell (14.4 modem). I think caps are all I can do to it, but I don't know. It's such an interesting looking (and huge) card I may put a pic of it up.
 
Since this old thread has been revived, and so have I...
Luke - It depends:
Gaming: X-Fi is optimized for gaming; it was made for 3D audio and the like.
Music: Get something better.
Movies: Ditto.

Pafi - Three solutions:
Typical computer guy answer: Re-install drivers, set all settings to default, then check.
Guy who thinks he's an engineer answer: Check all of the caps for bulge/leak, check the surface of the card for burns, especially around little black squares with two or three legs.
Normal Person Answer: There's better cards anyway, Try finding a used X-Fi XtreemMusic, or grab the Asus Xonar DS if you can spare $50, otherwise go up to an M-Audio (if you input) or something HT Omega if you're made of money, which I assume is not the case, since you are here.

Ted - Newegg has about the same pricing, but they're out of stock. It's also a good choice, though.
 
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llamaboy!

Thank you for your answer, but I don't search for solution as long as I don't know whether it's an error or a feature. I would like somebody who has this kind of (or similar) soundcard to check the output. I could have try thousand things, but I don't have so much time.

I quess I will have to ask this question from Creative.

Try finding a used X-Fi XtreemMusic

Why? Is it free of this problem for sure? (However I won't buy this, because it's 7 times more expensive than the one I bought.)
 
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