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Mark Muschett and Mikael Hagén put Abit's AU10 5.1 sound card the test

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Abit's AU10

Mark Muschett and Mikael Hagén - Last updated February 7, 2001

 Large Card Image

Important Info:

Sound card By : Abit

Price : ~$50

API Support :  DirectSound, DS3D, EAX 1.0, and A3D 1.0 (by translating to DS3D calls, works with most but not all titles). A3D 1.0 only supported with the VXD drivers.

Minimum System Requirements:

  • PCI Slot on Mother Board  
  • System Memory - 16MB or above (32MB for Wave table software users )
  • CPU - Pentium 133Mhz or higher, need Pentium 166 or higher for software Wavetable  
  • If you wish to enjoy Dolby Digital 5.1 Channel effect, then you would need to have a Pentium II 266 CPU or Higher (preferably 400 CPU) installed on your PC’s Motherboard  
  • OS - Windows 9x, Windows NT 4.0 or MS DOS 6.0 or above  
  • Hard disk drive : 12MB free on your hard disk  
  • CD-ROM or DVD-ROM  
  • The plug of Mini-Din G9 for 5.1 CH. Speakers system or DIY multi-channel speakers

Reviewers PC:

Mark
- Win98
- Celeron 333a o/c 416
- 128MB PC100 ram
- Creative TNT
- Creative Voodoo Blaster 12 M
- 6.1  and 13 GIG EIDE HD
- For four speaker testing purpose I hooked the card up to Videologic's Sirocco Crossfire speaker system using the analog inputs as well as MidiLand S4-7100. For 6-speaker testing I used the MidiLand S4-7100 and the Abit SP-50. For two speaker testing purposes I used the same speaker systems but only connecting to the front channels as well as the Diamond Audio Technology HPM-4100 and for headphones testing I used a set of Sennheiser HD525s.  Digital output was tested with the MidiLand ADS-2000 as well as the Cambridge SoundWorks DTT2500 and Creative DTT3500.

Mikael
- Win98
- Celeron 300a o/c 450
- 128MB PC100 ram
- GeForce DDR
- 6.4 GB Quantum SE
- For four speaker testing purpose I hooked the card up to Videologic's Sirocco Crossfire speaker system using the analog inputs and later in testing I used Videologic's Digi Theatre speaker system for 6-speaker testing. For two speaker testing purposes I used the VideoLogic Sirocco Pro as well as the same speaker systems but only connecting to the front channels and for headphones testing I used a set of Sennheiser HD5570

Specifications
  • ForteMedia FM801 Sound Chip
  • Support 5.1 channel Home Theatre Speaker Output
  • A3D, DS3D, Q3D and EAX Compatible
  • Software provide Dolby Digital DTS,MP3 5.1 Surround
  • Wavetable Synthesizer: Hardware FM Synthesizer for Adlib and General MIDI compatibility
  • Bus Interface: PCI Bus master compliant with PCI v2.2
  • Build in power amplifier
  • DDMA. Serial IRQ and Proprietary legacy support
  • Audio Converters: 18-bit Audio CODEC support
  • Sampling Rates: up to 48 KHz
  • Games Compatibility: Compatible with all standard Windows games and most DOS games (in Real Mode DOS)
  • Sample Rate Converters: Hardware-based sample rate converters support 32KHz, 44.1KHz and 48KHz sampling rate
  • Audio Inputs/Outputs: Microphone input, Line input, Line output, Aux input on internal header, CD input on internal header, 1 G9 speaker output, S/PDIF optical output
  • IDI Interface: Hardware-based MPU-401 MIDI UART-compatible interface through joystick connector.
  • Joystick Interface: provide standard analog/digital joystick support
  • Yamaha XG Professional Software Synthesizer included
  • Compatibility: Windows 95/98/NT4.0/2000


Review Index:

Introduction:

Abit is a name that should be familiar to many PC users but that's thanks to their strong line of motherboards and not because of any established presence in the audio market. However, they have been widening their focus into the multimedia market with video cards for a little while now. Last year (2000) they decided to enter the multimedia audio market with a 6 channel sound card and two 5.1 ready speaker systems, the more entry level SP-51 and the higher end SP-50. In this review we will be looking at the AU-10 sound card.

In the summer of 2000 just having support for 5.1 output was enough to get some attention. However, that changed quite rapidly during the fall (2000) with the introduction of the Santa Cruz/SonicFury, Philips Acoustic Edge, Hercules Game Theater XP, Creative Labs Live 5.1 cards and several other FM801 based boards. Just like the first 5.1 soundcards that were introduced last Abit AU-10 uses the FM801 chip. It’s a newer version, FM801-AU, compared to the FM801-AS with the most important change being support for AC-3 pass-thru, a feature that will be handy one Abit releases their digital bracket board for the AU-10.

To get the attention of buyers Abit has bundled the AU-10 with an IR remote and a special version of WinDVD 2000 pre-configured to work with the remote for an impressive list price of just $40-50.

As with other FM801 boards, the AU-10 uses QSound’s Q3D 2.0 engine as its 3D sound and reverb engine, which includes support for DS3D, A3D 1.0 and EAX 1.0. A future driver upgrade may add EAX 2.0 support as well. In this review we will offer an overview of how the card performs for playing music, games and DVD movies the card only going into more detail where it offers features not common for all other 5.1 FM801 based boards. 

For a more detailed look at the FM801 chip we suggest you check out our FM801 reference review. 

Technical Overview --->

 

Sound Card Reviews

Audigy Detailed Impressions

Hurricane Extreme Initial Review

Hercules GameTheater XP

Philips Acoustic Edge

SoundBlaster Live! reference review

SoundBlaster Live! Platinum 5.1 European Edition

SoundBlaster Live! Platinum 5.1 America's Edition

Sound Blaster Live! Player 5.1

SoundBlaster Live! MP3+ 5.1

Sound Blaster Live! X-Gamer 5.1

FM801 reference review

Mushroom Siren Audio I

Abit AU10

Best Data Theatrix

Turtle Beach SantaCruz

VideoLogic SonicFury

Hoontech SoundTrack Digital-XG

Boostaroo Headphone Amplifier / Splitter

Sound Blaster Live!Drive I and II

Sound Blaster Creative Digital I/O 2

Spectrum Research Theater 2000

Qsound UltraQ

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