Creative Labs Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro

By Nathaniel Wilkins, ZDNet UK
23 March 2004 01:12 PM
Tags: sound, zs, blaster, labs, card, pro, 2, creative
Creative Labs Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro The Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro is Creative's most capable audio-output device to date, perfect for the PC audio enthusiast not yet ready to commit to professional-level audio gear.

An AU$499 sound card should never be an impulse buy, but Creative Labs' Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro makes a strong case for itself. The card's highlights include 7.1-channel output, high audio resolution, support for advanced home-audio standards and an external I/O hub with so many ports that you can send or receive audio from just about any component you can think of. Casual gamers and media enthusiasts will probably find this package overkill, but for the serious PC audiophile, this is the pinnacle of consumer-level sound hardware.

On the market for 15 years, Creative Labs' Sound Blaster PC audio-output devices have benefited from long-term evolution. These continuous improvements are most evident in the Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro, the flagship model released late last year. Featuring 7.1-channel audio output, 24-bit playback and a slew of inputs and outputs, the Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro takes PC entertainment to a hard-core level.

The Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro includes an external I/O hub that's chock-full of ports. Its coaxial and optical digital-audio inputs and outputs enable you to connect a variety of home-audio devices to your PC for recording and playing back, while the two FireWire ports let you connect to digital camcorders, audio players and other devices. One quarter-inch line/guitar input, one quarter-inch line/mike input and a MIDI input/output set make the ZS Platinum Pro a suitable choice for home-recording hobbyists. Up front, a quarter-inch headphone port enables private listening, while around back, there's a digital mini-plug output for digital speaker sets. Via two AD Link ports, the I/O hub connects to the PCI sound card itself. The PCI card has three analogue mini-plug outputs to which you can attach up to 7.1-channel speakers. An optional joystick/MIDI-port bracket lets you plug in older game controllers, as well, though we'd rather have a USB 2.0 port.

In addition to the ports, a playback volume/mute control, a microphone gain control and a button for Creative Multi Speaker Surround, or CMSS (which is Creative's up-mixing/down-mixing/headphone spatialisation technology), round out the I/O hub's front panel. Thanks to the IR remote, you can operate many ZS Platinum Pro features from across the room.

Setting up the ZS Platinum Pro is simple, although it wasn't quick in our tests -- it took more than 20 minutes to install the large number of included components. Here's the process in a nutshell: we opened up the PC, installed the PCI card and the joystick/MIDI bracket, and then connected the I/O hub to the PCI card. After installing the software, we connected our Creative GigaWorks S750 7.1-channel speakers, calibrated the setup with the THX certification utility for maximum movie audio quality and we were done. The driver software lets you optimise settings, although its multi-window approach is too compartmentalised, making it hard to quickly jump to the exact setting screen you're looking for.

The ZS Platinum Pro adds Digital Theater Systems' DTS-ES standard to the mix. Although the Dolby Digital EX 6.1 decoding of last-generation Sound Blasters uses up-mixing to synthesise the sixth channel (rear-centre speakers), DTS-ES sources have a discrete sixth channel for better sound localization. When we fired up Gladiator's 'Hell Unleashed' scene in DTS-ES mode, the rear speakers created a slightly more convincing soundfield than we heard with Dolby Digital EX 6.1.

To test the ZS Platinum Pro's musical wherewithal, we popped in our DVD-Audio disc of Philip Glass's Koyaanisqatsi. No complaints here: the disc had a suitably clean and dynamic sound. Testing out CMSS, we fired up some MP3 tracks. With speakers and headphones, CMSS made the Flaming Lips' 'Halloween on the Barbary Coast' sound somewhat more full than it is with regular 5.1 or 6.1 output, but the simulated 7.1-channel effect was not as impressive as when we tested PC game audio that can break up the sound to each specific channel.

The Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro supports Creative's EAX Advanced HD and Microsoft's DirectSound 3D standards, which the vast majority of games use to deliver 3D audio. The Creative Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro can render 7.1 discrete channels from games that incorporate DirectSound 3D, while it reaps additional ambient benefits from EAX 4.0 Advanced HD-enabled games. When we played Soldier of Fortune II, the ZS Platinum Pro and our 7.1-channel speaker system created a truly enveloping environment and aided game play by making it easy for us to track the positions of our enemies. Later we fired up Star Wars Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy, an EAX 4.0-enabled title. Although we can't say that EAX 4.0 is a revolutionary advancement compared to earlier versions of the standard, we did observe that the ambient environment was among the most complex, immersive and three-dimensional that we've heard in any game.

The ZS Platinum Pro ships with an easy-to-follow quick-installation poster, supplemented by a Web link to electronic documentation as a part of the software installation.

Creative Labs Sound Blaster Audigy 2 ZS Platinum Pro
Company: Creative
Price: AU$499
Phone: (02) 9666 6500

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Talkback 3 comments

    This product is the best going ...Anonymous -- 30/03/04

    This product is the best going for radio production and to a lesser extent music. I could not speak too highly of it has I've had Audigy Platinum Ex, then the Audigy 2 (with the internal breakout conecction and now the above mentioned product.

    All Audigy products I've used from Creative's stable of audio solutions have more than lived up the manufacturers hype.

    I got this sound card to help ...Anonymous -- 05/03/05

    I got this sound card to help put together a midi connection between my eMachine and my Yamaha keyboard. I am trying to record from the keyboard into my Cakewalk Home Studio softward. I also want to play back my recordings on the keyboard.

    So far I have not been able to get either connection working. I've studied the cable hook-ups and know for certain that they are hooked up right. I am also convinced that I've got the keyboard set up correctly.

    I've been on the phone with Cakewalk, and have configured it to their specifications.

    I have also exchanged several emails with Creative about this problem. Creative never responds directly to the points I make in my emails. Instead they come up with suggestions unrelated to my questions and they swamp me with documentation that was not developed for the Audigy card.

    I probably will buy a new sound card - one with the good ole joystick port that I've successfully used before.

    Has anyone actually gotten the midi connection on this card working?

    midi connection Anonymous -- 29/12/07 (in reply to #120114037)

    i have (after many long and frustrating tries) succesfully made an output connection from the midi ports to my Boss DR-5 but unfortunatly have not been able to establish an input. If anyone has any tips or can help please comment here :)

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