I can’t hear audio input (Mic, Line-in, CD-in, etc.) from my speakers Instructions:

1.Go to the mixer recording page in the Audio Center and select the correct input as the recording source (Xonar D2X uses high-quality 118dB digital recording and monitoring to route the input signal through to the output.) If you are using Windows Vista, please also go to system audio control panel to see the current default recording/input device is right.

2.Remember to turn on the digital monitoring button for that recording source.

I can’t hear the TV tuner audio from my speakers

Instructions:

1.If you are using a traditional TV tuner card which has analog audio output, please connect it to the Aux-In header on the audio card

2.Select Aux-In as the recording source and remember to turn on the digital monitoring button on the recording mixer page

3.If you are using a TV tuner card which has digital audio output instead of analog, please check that the sound is not muted and whether other applications can play sound out. If you still have problem, please read the TV tuner card’s software user guide.

I don’t see MIDI device (MPU-401) on Windows Vista. How could I use it? Instructions:

Windows Vista doesn’t show MPU-401 MIDI port on system. However, Xonar D2X did support MIDI I/O and you can directly use it to connect MIDI instruments on Vista without any setting.

I found no sound effects when playing 96K or 192KHz sound sources. Instructions:

1.Currently Xonar D2X effects including Dolby/DTS support common 44.1K,

48KHz sound sources processing and will assure high-definition audio (96K/192KHz) in hi-fidelity playback. This is also usually the behavior that professional audiophiles and musicians prefer.

2.If you still want to have the effects, you can use some editing software (Ableton Live, Cakewalk, CoolEdit, Soundforge, etc.) to convert the sounds into 48KHz files.

3.Please note that the frequency meter on Xonar D2X Audio Center panel will not take effect either when the playback source is 96KHz or 192KHz sample rate to prevent any processing distortion.

ASUS Xonar D2X

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