b3ta.com board
You are not logged in. Login or Signup
Home » Messageboard » XXX » Message 6165879 (Thread)

# Well...
(he started warily) ..... even though Logic Audio (and CuBase, etc etc) used to be a primarily PC-based product, it was designed (coded) on Macs due to the board-level integration of all audio input/output. Whereas on a PC, the sound card could be one of several dozen different sorts.
I think having a 'standard' sound card that the code could talk to might have been the reason for this semi-urban myth to have stuck around for so long.

*considers pants to be well and truly bored off.....*
(, Thu 27 Jul 2006, 12:54, archived)
# the only reason a mac is better at audio than a PC
is coz they are quiet in the studio.

most high end pcs in music production tend to have had a fair amount of noise suppression bits added to them, as they are noisy buggers.

but our studio uses 5 PC's and we would not have a mac around the place, anyway Atari ST's were used before macs....
(, Thu 27 Jul 2006, 12:59, archived)
# You can make completely silent high end PCs if you care enough though.
(, Thu 27 Jul 2006, 13:06, archived)
# yep that was more or less my point really...
My own I just added a decent PSU, a couple of artic cooling fans and a hard drive accoustic sleeve.. job done, total cost around £90 on top of the PC's price. My mate went overboard, and actually built a soundproof cupboard complete with air extractors out through the wall!!
(, Thu 27 Jul 2006, 13:10, archived)
# Liquid cooling is a good start.
I have one of those 120mm Zalman copper coolers but it's still not silent. Virtually silent PSU (though that was £70 :/ ).

The real problem was cooling on my graphics card.. stock cooler wasn't good enough so I ended up putting a noisy one on, thus undoing all my hard work...

However you can get fanless PSUs, cool you cpu/gfx with water and then it's just the hard drives I guess.

Which HD sleves did you use? Did they work well?
(, Thu 27 Jul 2006, 13:25, archived)