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Product Reviews

Multimedia hardware
Yamaha SW60XG  [PC Pro]
COMPANY: Yamaha PRICE: £127  (£149 inc VAT)
RATING: ISSUE: 28  DATE: Apr 97
   
Verdict: High-quality upgrade for users without a daughterboard connector, offering reasonable value for money. Even for those with a connector, the improved sound quality of the standalone unit is worth the extra money.

Most wavetable upgrade products are daughterboards that connect to a header on the host sound card. They can be used either to add wavetable synthesis to a card offering only FM synthesis, or to increase the polyphony and/or multitimbrality of a wavetable sound card (that is, the number of notes and the number of instruments respectively which can be played at the same time).

However, there are a couple of drawbacks to this approach. First, although most FM sound cards now have a header for a daughterboard, some of the early products - notably the original SoundBlaster 16 Value - offered no such upgrade path. Second, and more important, the DAC (digital to analog converter) and audio amplifier on the host sound card are used to process the output from the daughterboard. If the original sound card is a budget offering, or even an AWE32, the mediocre quality of this circuitry could seriously degrade the sound from the wavetable synthesiser.

The Yamaha SW60XG addresses both of these potential limitations by interfacing directly to the ISA bus rather than to a header on a sound card. With a built-in 18-bit DAC, analog sound reproduction is phenomenal. Clearly, this product is in quite a different category from most wavetable upgrade cards. In fact, although Yamaha markets the SW60XG as an upgrade, it could just as easily be considered as a standalone wavetable synthesiser, rather like the Roland Sound Canvas but without the MIDI ports.

Installation is as simple as could reasonably be expected. Yamaha has produced what it believes to be unique - a sound card with no IRQ channel to set. It's not plug and play: you need to set jumpers for the MIDI port address, although the default will usually suffice. The only other jumper you may need to alter is the one relating to the type of microphone. The software installation is equally straightforward.

Having installed the card and the software, if you're using it to upgrade an existing sound card, you need to make some external connections between the two cards. There are two possible ways of doing this.

Option one is the preferred route. Patch the line-out socket on the original sound card to the line-in socket on
 
 
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the SW60XG and attach the speakers to the Yamaha card. The SW60XG has no on-board audio amplifier, so this option requires active speakers.

Option two is to patch the output from the SW60XG to the line-in socket on the sound card and attach the speakers to the original sound card. Assuming that the original sound card will drive non-amplified speakers, this route doesn't need active speakers. However, the sound quality will then be degraded.

On a basic level, the sound quality of a wavetable synthesiser depends on the amount of ROM used to store the instrument samples. At 4Mb, the Yamaha SW60XG has more memory than most sound cards, enough for 676 melody instruments and 21 drum kits, which is more than any other non-Yamaha card on the market. Only specialised external MIDI synthesisers boast a higher capacity. However, compression efficiency and the quality of the original instrument recording make a real difference, so that more memory doesn't necessarily mean better sound.

In this respect, I expected the SW60XG to do well, because it's based on the same chipset as the DB50XG daughterboard which has a high reputation in the audiophile community. I wasn't disappointed. The sound quality is extremely good, better even than Roland's Sound Canvas. Wind instruments, which are always a weak area for all MIDI synthesisers, are highly realistic. Piano and bass sounds are full-bodied and vibrant.

The SW60XG supports a variety of hardware effects that can be applied to its MIDI sounds to boost realism even further. These include 11 types of reverb and 11 types of chorus, plus distortion, rotary, echo, flanger and delay effects that make a further 42 settings. These DSP effects can even be applied to any digital audio routed through the card, from the CD, line or microphone inputs.

Three software packages are included. Perhaps the most useful is the full version of Cakewalk Express, and there's also Yamaha's own XG Editor. Although the SW60XG is compatible with the General MIDI, it also supports the XG standard, which is a superset of GM which expands on its 128 voices (instrument sounds) and adds a number of audio effects that can be controlled with this utility. Finally, Effects Gear II controls the DSP effects you apply to digital audio routed through the card.

At a cost of £127, the SW60XG isn't cheap. In fact, it could cost much more than the sound card it's used to upgrade. However, when you consider the sound quality, this really isn't bad value for money. Compared with cards such as the Turtle Beach TBS-2000, which only has 2Mb of wavetable ROM, the Yamaha has plenty to distinguish it.

For the gamer it may be rather too expensive, but for anyone serious about their MIDI the SW60XG offers the best set of samples around.

By Mike Bedford

SPECIFICATIONS:
ISA wavetable upgrade, IDE interface, 4Mb sample ROM containing 676 instrument sounds plus 12 drum kits, GM and XG-compatible. Bundled with XG editing software, Cakewalk Express and Effects Gear utility.

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