Hi saxguy007,

My input is anything but anecdotal on this subject. My observations are empirically derived. The various specs are indeed measurable, provided the right measuring equipments and knowhow are available.

Today's built in sound is rather good to great on these newer PCs, near audiophile quality in many cases, and there is good reason for that. You see, the large customer base of users interested in streaming online audio, video, etc. has created a situation where the mfr's have responded. And by comparison to the offerings of only a few years prior, their response has been stellar, actually. I use the internal sound of my laptop on live gigs, radio broadcasts, etc. with impunity, carrying audio connectors, adaptors and cabling in my laptop case that can adapt that "lowly" earphone jack to the Inpouts of soundboards, amplifiers, mixers, etc. and do not have any qualms about the sound quality at all. But that is for Playback purposes, read on.

So using the onboard sound for Playback purposes is certainly feasible.

As far as the creation of .wav files (and other compressed media files for that matter) the onboard soundcard has nothing to do with the conversion, today it is all done within the realm of the digital and thus will be the same regardless of soundcard choice.

The one caveat about using onboard sound comes around when the issue is Recording your own Audio. Here the onboard sound does not come up to the snuff of the playback abilities. The mfr's won't see a need to go to that expense either, unless and until market studies can show them that there are a majority of users demanding the kind of Input audio specs that are necessary for multitrack music recording. As of today, the great majority of users typically only use the Audio Inputs for headset phones and the like, and as you should know, the spoken voice does not really require the low noise, higher frequency bandwidth and other of the better audio aspects. Don't get me wrong here, the Input of laptop and desktop built in sound has indeed improved somewhat over what it used to be, but what it used to be was not that great to begin with. However, today it is indeed possible to use the internal sound for recording music and the hit taken is not as severe as it was, say back in the day when Win98 was the new OS. And you had to diable the taskbar clock to prevent audio interrupts. (!)

If you are serious about Multitrack Audio Recording, by all means consider the aftermarket sound device offerings seriously. As to whether you will "notice a difference" in what you hear, well, THAT is subjective in the sense that I cannot know very much about what you are able to hear, what you know about what you hear, etc. But I do know that the better way to "Learn to Trust Your Ears" -- which, incidentally, can become infallible as to such issues with enough time and study, thought and work.

In order to get those ears to be such trustworthy devices, makes sense to do all that you can that is affordable to make your listening as good as it can be.


--Mac