Our trip to the ASUS booth today revealed several new product surprises, but one in particular had us grabbing our notebook to provide an immediate update from the show floor. We already knew ASUS had introduced the upcoming Xonar HDAV1.3 audio card yesterday. What we did not expect was the ability to test the card and see it in action at the ASUS booth.


The Xonar HDAV1.3 provides HDMI 1.3a compatibility and introduces their "Splendid HD" video processor on this particular series for the first time. Simply put, the "Splendid HD" video processor performs post-processing on the outbound image and does so without affecting CPU loads. We naturally like our images to be viewed as the director intended, but for certain audiences this video post-processing will provide edge enhancement, increased color saturation, and noise reduction. Watching the demos provided by ASUS, we did notice all of the features they tout at work and in a couple of instances where the sky was a hazy light blue, the Splendid HD processor did produce additional definition of the clouds and deeper blue in the sky as promised. Several of the visitors liked the change, I did not but it is a matter of personal preference. More importantly, we did not notice a degradation in image quality via the HDMI pass-through process on the monitors that ASUS utilized for the demo.

Getting past the video capabilities, the main focus of this PCI Express based card is to provide outstanding audio output. In our opinion, it does just that and with the new features, this card is going to have a long and useful life in our home theater systems. Of course, driver support is critical and it appears that ASUS has the new features working properly at this time. I only had limited time with the test system but touted features such as 7.1 channel, 24-bit/192kHz LPCM output through HDMI worked properly. Even more impressive was the seamless support for bitstreaming DTS-HD Master Audio and Dolby TrueHD during BD playback with several recent titles. This support is based on both PAPS and AACS content schemes.

ASUS will bundle a customized version of ArcSoft TotalMedia Theater for playback duties. I plan on returning to the booth later today for additional time with the player, but the titles ASUS provided for BD playback worked without a hitch during initial testing. I will not be totally convinced until I can do a few A/B comparisons and throw some additional titles in the ArcSoft player based on previous experiences.

The Xonar HDAV1.3 is very similar to other cards in the Xonar D2 lineup as it uses the same ASUS AV200 codec chip. This includes the digital to analog converters (Burr-Brown PCM1796, 123 dB SNR), National Semiconductor LM4562 operational amplifiers (opamp), and analog-to-digital (Cirrus Logic CS5381, 120 dB SNR) converters. The Xonar HDAV1.3 is the first in the Xonar family to utilize opamp sockets to allow simple, solder-less modifications for user-customized sound. ASUS claims their HyperGrounding technology greatly reduces EMI noise while providing clean 120 dB SNR and distortion rates of 0.0004% on all eight channels.


The Deluxe Version of the HDAV1.3 will include the HDAV H6 expansion card that connects to it via a ribbon cable. Both cards require a PCI Express x1 slot, but the daughter card is not powered. The daughter card provides analog out capability that allows up to eight channel analog output when used with the HDAV1.3. The HDAV1.3 features HDMI input and output ports, RCA front-channel output, shared line/microphone input, along with S/PDIF input/output ports. The HDAV H6 also features swappable opamps on each channel.

Pricing is not set yet, but we expect the Deluxe Version to carry a heft premium over the current Xonar D2X card. However, based on initial experiences I am sure my Visa card is going to get a workout when the card is released in late July. We have provided a few additional screenshots of the new control panel in operation and a look at the demo unit on the main floor. We will be back with an update on the card and other new releases from ASUS shortly.






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  • Odeen - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    So how does HDCP work with this thing?

    In order to process video, you have to decrypt it. So, does this Asus card decode the HDCP-encrypted stream from the video card and, if so, does it send out video that's re-encrypted?

    If there is no re-encryption going on, the value of this card has suddenly shot up. :)
  • sotti - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    it has to have HDCP to bitstream HD audio.

    This card is the real deal.
  • madgonad - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    It is the first PC product that claims Bitstream support of the HD formats. Others have done multichannel LPCM, but this is the first to claim Bitstream.

    Do keep an eye on the new ATI/AMD video cards. They are claiming 7.1 HD audio which is at least multichannel LPCM and possibly a Bitstream solution as well.

    And as noted before. If all you need is the digital output on HDMI, why are you going to buy a card that is expensive solely because of the nice DACs that it includes?
  • Zorlac - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    Will the card bitstream audio to home AV receivers that can decode Dolby TrueHD and DTS-HD Master Audio along with older standards (i.e. Dolby Digital, etc.)?
  • sotti - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    That's what the article said.

    They used a custome version of arcsoft total media to light up their AVR with bitstream HD audio.

    Now if they'd release an HDMI only version. burr-brown and 123db snr ratio is great but meaningless if I'm using HDMI.
  • cmdrdredd - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    What I would like is a card that can decode the TrueHD or DTS HD MA and send it via LPCM to my older receiver which cannot decode those formats, but has HDMI.
  • sotti - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    The card can't do the decode in hardware.
    But the software can do the decode, and since it's PAVP the software should allow full resolution decoded TrueHD, DTS MA output via LPCM

    Like I said, this card is the real deal.
  • Etsp - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    Does this unit also fail to come with a basic connection for front panel audio ports? I own the PCI Asus Xonar, and I can say that the drivers are glitchy at best, and down right fail at worst. Hopefully they will dedicate more manpower into getting drivers released, and maybe, hopefully, optimistically, some accessible notes regarding the changes between versions, other than 'fix bug with game tabula' (which I happened to have tried the game, Tabula Rasa, and I knew exactly what they were talking about)
  • alkalinetaupehat - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    If you look at the last picture on the page the top-right corner of the card seems to have a hookup for front panel audio, Etsp. On another note, short of doing a conversion via cables, is there a way to hook up a 3.5mm jack straight to the card? This card is definitely vying for a spot in my next PC build for sure.
  • bigboxes - Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - link

    Didn't you mean Burr-Brown?

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