E-mu 20K

X-Fi (for "Extreme Fidelity") is the commercial name for Creative Labs' E-MU 20K1 (CA20K1) and E-MU 20K2 (CA20K2) audio chips. The 20K1 chip was launched in August 2005, and ever since it has been used in a variety of audio solutions from Creative Labs, and more recently third-party manufacturers, such as Korean manufacturer Auzentech and Audiotrak.

The 130 nm, 51 million transistors audio processor operates at 400 MHz and its computational power is estimated at 10,000 MIPS, which is about 24 times higher than the estimated performance of its predecessor – the Audigy processor. E-mu 20K features the Quartet DSP, a set of 4 identical digital signal processors interconnected with a wide ring bus.

The CA20K1 chip is a slave processor which requires a host CPU to control it. The CA20K2 adds an embedded RISC processor which controls the audio part; this configuration safeguards against the audio latency of its PCI Express interface. 20K2 also has more I/O ports, a DDR SDRAM memory interface, and a built-in Universal Audio Architecture component.

A big improvement in the X-Fi DSP over the previous Audigy design, is the complete overhaul of the resampling engine on the card. The previous Audigy cards had their DSPs locked at 48 kHz/16-bit, meaning any content that didn't match this format had to be resampled on the card in hardware, which resulted in serious intermodulation distortion. For the X-Fi, Creative completely rewrote the resampling engine and dedicated more than half of the power of the DSP to the process, resulting in a very clean resample. Furthermore, in "Audio Creation mode" with "bit-matched playback" option, the X-Fi can work with real 44,100 Hz sample rate without any kind of resampling or other signal processing.

The audio processor on X-Fi was the most powerful at its time of release, offering an extremely robust sample rate conversion (SRC) engine in addition to enhanced internal sound channel routing options and greater 3D audio enhancement capabilities. A significant portion of the audio processing unit was devoted to this resampling engine. The SRC engine was far more capable than previous Creative sound card offerings, a limitation that had been a major thorn in Creative's side. Most digital audio is sampled at 44.1 kHz, a standard no doubt related to CD Digital Audio, while sound cards were often designed to process audio at 48 kHz. So, the 44.1 kHz audio must be resampled to 48 kHz (Creative's previous cards' DSPs operated at 48 kHz) for the audio DSP to be able to process and affect it. A poor resampling implementation introduces artifacts into the audio which can be heard, and measured as higher intermodulation distortion, within higher frequencies (generally 16 kHz and up).[1] X-Fi's resampling engine produces a near-lossless-quality result, far exceeding any known audio card DSP available at the time of release. This functionality is used not only for simple audio playback, but for several other features of the card such as the "Crystalizer", a technology that claims to improve the clarity of digital music through digital analysis (supported by all X-Fi models, including the Xtreme Audio and X-Mod).

The X-Fi name has also been applied to cards based on the CA0106 and CA0110 chips, which belong to the previous generation Live!/Audigy series.

Contents

Applications

Sound Blaster X-Fi series

Card Release Signal-to-noise ratio Interface Chip RAM Notes
Elite Pro Aug '05 116 dB PCI EMU20K1 64 MB additional software included
Fatal1ty Aug '05 109 dB PCI EMU20K1 64 MB also known as: Fatal1ty FPS / Fatal1ty Edition / Platinum Fatal1ty Champion
Platinum Aug '05 109 dB PCI EMU20K1 2 MB
XtremeMusic Aug '05 109 dB PCI EMU20K1 2 MB still widely available as OEM product, may require special drivers. Retail version also still available in some countries such as Korea, Republic of.[2]
Digital Audio Sep '05 109 dB PCI EMU20K1 2 MB Japan-only variant of XtremeMusic with additional jack extension
XtremeGamer Oct '06 109 dB PCI EMU20K1 2 MB Low profile card (half height), replacement for XtremeMusic
XtremeGamer Fatal1ty Pro Oct '06 109 dB PCI EMU20K1 64 MB Basically the original Fatal1ty/Fatal1ty Edition/Fatal1ty FPS/Platinum Fatal1ty Champion card without the I/O drive box and remote control.
Titanium Fatal1ty Champion Jun '08 109 dB PCIe EMU20K2 64 MB
Titanium Fatal1ty Professional Jun '08 109 dB PCIe EMU20K2 64 MB Basically the Titanium Fatal1ty Champion without the I/O drive box.
Titanium Professional Audio Jun '08 109 dB PCIe EMU20K2 16 MB Asia-only variant of X-Fi Titanium with minijack-to-2RCA cable and EMI shield
Titanium Sep '08 109 dB PCIe EMU20K2 16 MB First X-Fi card for which Creative Labs made available a software-based implementation of Dolby Digital Live to allow for real-time encoding to DD 5.1 and subsequent output over the optical out port. DDL is also available for all other Titanium models.
Titanium HD Mar '10 122 dB PCIe CA20K2 16 MB First card with THX TruStudio PC audio technology.[3] Top quality current output Burr-Brown Advanced Segment PCM1794 DAC. First stereo-based internal Creative PCI/PCI-E sound card with gold-plated RCA out since the ISA AWE64 Gold. Only available in certain markets.

Third party

Card Release Signal-to-noise ratio Chipset RAM Notes
Auzen X-Fi Prelude Aug '07 *(120dB) EMU20K1 64 MB High-end X-Fi product designed and marketed by Auzentech with Creative Labs' collaboration
Auzen X-Fi Forte Jan '09 *(120dB for Front, 114dB for center, rear, side, woofer) EMU20K2 64 MB Low profile card (half-height) and PCIe support variant of Prelude, High-end X-Fi product designed and marketed by Auzentech with Creative Labs' collaboration
Auzen X-Fi HomeTheater HD Jul '09 109dB EMU20K2 64 MB High-end All-round variant of Auzentech X-Fi especially focusing on HDMI 1.3a and HD audio path-through.[4] Software support for HD audio pass-through.[5]

References

External links