If you weren't happy with the Bass on the X-Fi then you probably won't be happy with anything in Vista. X-Fi offers a lot more control over Bass and settings than other solutions along with EAX support through OpenAL and ALchemy in games. Still, I think you either tried X-Fi before they got their drivers/consoles worked out in Vista or you're not setting the right options:Originally posted by: arredondo
I've spent literally hours trying to solve the subwoofer problem but nothing works. I've tried the stuff you mentioned in varoious ways but still bass is weak when gaming. It is fine in other modes. Remember, I am going through my Home Theater audio setup, not a standard PC audio setup (where I'm sure it would work fine).
X-Fi Console and Settings
Bass Crossover Frequency makes the biggest difference. Pretty self-explanatory, bass below the frequency you set is routed to your subwoofer. This is particularly important for default settings that do not have a dedicated LFE signal. Pretty much everything in Vista defaults to PCM stereo so its kinda important to have a card that upmixes well (or completely bypasses it like OpenAL). Also notice that in those cases you may need to turn off "full range" for your surround satellites in order to get more bass routed to your woofer. I get bass to the woofer either way, but that may help you. There's also a few settings in Vista > properties that let you do some low-level bass/treble adjustments.
Edit: Btw I am using a 5.1 DD/DTS receiver via analog as well, and have been since the Audigy 1/2 on Win2k.
A great thing about Vista is that its much better about separating user-mode from kernel-mode apps, which basically means it'll run even when everything else comes crashing down around it. This should help you troubleshoot your problem and find the source of any incompatibility. When you kill a process it creates a dump log in your windows directory. You can view all of these and get an idea of what the problem is.As for the process hang up, obviously Microsoft is aware of it since it even pops up a help box saying I need to close hl2.exe or reboot my system before it loads it up again (i.e. occassionally after a game of Team Fortress 2). It happens more often when browsing the internet via Firefox at various websites. No, nothing illegal or weird but normal sites, like Gamefaqs or the ESPN NBA page.
A lot of times it can be an incompatible driver from a piece of hardware (USB devices are prone to do this) you wouldn't suspect causing the problems. HL2 games are common so you shouldn't have problems and FF ofc as a browser shouldn't be giving you problems either. Just check the error logs for those programs and run a quick google search on the error string or device and you can probably find the root of the problem.
