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- Path: menudo.uh.edu!usenet
- From: dyson@sunfish.physics.uiowa.edu (Richard L. Dyson)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.reviews
- Subject: REVIEW: Cardinal SOUNDvision board for BridgeBoard users
- Followup-To: comp.sys.amiga.emulations
- Date: 28 Sep 1993 16:45:37 GMT
- Organization: The Amiga Online Review Column - ed. Daniel Barrett
- Lines: 384
- Sender: amiga-reviews@math.uh.edu (comp.sys.amiga.reviews moderator)
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <289pnh$m4q@menudo.uh.edu>
- Reply-To: dyson@sunfish.physics.uiowa.edu (Richard L. Dyson)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: karazm.math.uh.edu
- Keywords: hardware, BridgeBoard, graphics, Super VGA, sound, SCSI, MIDI, commercial
-
-
- PRODUCT NAME
-
- Cardinal SOUNDvision - Model MPC500S/1M
-
-
- BRIEF DESCRIPTION
-
- An IBM-clone 16-bit ISA slot expansion board with a CD-quality sound
- synthesizer, sound mixing/recording/playback capability, a MIDI port, a SCSI
- CD-ROM interface, game port and a 1 MB Super-VGA interface in one full
- length card.
-
- Requires a BridgeBoard or similar product in your Amiga.
-
-
- AUTHOR/COMPANY INFORMATION
-
- Name: Cardinal Technologies, Inc.
- Address: 1832 Freedom Road
- Lancaster, PA 17601
- USA
-
- Telephone: (717) 293-3124
- FAX: (717) 293-3043
-
-
- LIST PRICE
-
- $289 (US) via "Computer Shopper" advertised mail-order prices.
-
- Though discontinued by Cardinal (they have newer models of boards
- with faster, more color video boards, but not multi-function like the
- SOUNDvision), the board was recently available via jvj@yorkshire.com on
- USENET for $125 (US).
-
-
- SPECIAL HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE REQUIREMENTS
-
- Since this is not an Amiga product, you need to have a BridgeBoard
- system such as (but not limited to) the Commodore A2286, A2386SX, or the
- Vortex GoldenGate 486, and at least one 16-bit AT-bus slot after the
- BridgeBoard is installed. The following hardware and software requirements
- apply to that of the BridgeBoard (or IBM-clone) environment and not to the
- Amiga.
-
- HARDWARE
-
- A minimum of 512 KB of RAM.
-
- A hard drive is not required, but as with most software it is
- highly recommended. A high density (1.44 MB) floppy drive
- is required to read the installation floppies. A shared
- high density Amiga floppy drive can be used as well as a
- dedicated IBM floppy drive.
-
- To take full advantage of the SOUNDvision card, a VGA
- compatible or multi-sync monitor must be used. The regular
- 1080 or 1084S cannot be used with the VGA output from the
- SOUNDvision card. A multisync monitor will allow you to
- make greater use of the Amiga's display modes as well as the
- IBM-clone VGA and SuperVGA modes. A manual A/B switch box
- would be a recommended purchase along with your VGA or
- multi-sync monitor. Otherwise, you will go crazy swapping
- video cables (as well as increasing your chance of
- accidentally shorting out your monitor, Amiga, and/or
- BridgeBoard).
-
- SOFTWARE
-
- DOS version 3.3 or higher (MicroSoft)
-
-
- COPY PROTECTION
-
- None. Hard drive installable.
-
-
- MACHINES USED FOR TESTING
-
- Machine 1:
-
- Amiga 2000 (rev 6.2) with an A2386SX @ 25 MHz
- A2620 with 68881 and 68851 @ 14 MHz
- 1 MB Chip RAM,2 MB 32-bit Fast RAM, 5 MB 16-bit Fast RAM
- Kickstart version 37.175 and WorkBench version 37.67
- Janus version 2.1
- generic IDE controller with Conner 30174, 170 MB hard drive
- Toshiba TXM-3201A1 External CD-ROM drive
- 5 MB RAM on A2386SX
- MS-DOS version 6.0
- Windows version 3.1
-
- Machine 2:
-
- Amiga 3000 @ 16 MHz with an A2386SX @ 25 MHz
- AmigaDOS version 2.04 with soft Kickstart on hard disk
- 2 MB Chip RAM,4 MB Fast RAM
- 50 MB hard drive
-
- Machine 3:
-
- Amiga 3000T with an A2386SX @ 25 MHz
- Mercury 040 @ 35 MHz
- 2 MB Chip RAM, 20 MB Fast RAM
- Kickstart version 37.175 and WorkBench version 38.35
- 1 MB RAM on A2386SX
- MS-DOS version 6.0 on BridgeBoard
-
-
- INSTALLATION
-
- The installation of the SOUNDvision card is conventional. The
- manual has general pictures and description for removing the cover all the
- way down to setting all the DIP switches and jumpers. In my case, it was
- not necessary to change any of the factory default settings to get it to
- work. The board is a 16-bit ISA bus slot card that slips into one of the
- Amiga's IBM/ISA slots and screws to the back of the computer case. There is
- also a daughter board and cable that can be mounted at the back of an empty
- card slot space. If you can not put the daughter board in the adjacent
- "slot", then you will need to get a longer cable as the one provided is just
- long enough to have this daughter board immediately adjacent to the
- SOUNDvision card. The daughter board does not actually use an ISA slot, it
- just has the MIDI and Game port connectors on it and is designed to mount in
- an empty "back of the case" opening. This daughter board is not required if
- you don't have the space to hold it or if you have no interest in the MIDI
- port or game port. The main board has three stereo mini-jacks for the audio
- in/out as well as the VGA connector. The SCSI interface is at the front of
- the board as an internal 50-pin header. There is no external SCSI (DB-25
- style) connector for the SCSI controller.
-
-
- SPECIFICATIONS
-
- Non-Interlaced SuperVGA Board:
-
- *1024x768 SuperVGA
- *1 Meg RAM on board
- *High Color 640x480 65K/32K colors
- *Flicker free non-interlaced monitor support
- *Fast 16-bit bus interface
- *Drivers for Windows, Lotus 1-2-3, Wordperfect, etc.
-
- 16-Bit CD Quality Stereo Sound:
-
- * True Stereo 4 operator FM synthesizer (Yamaha OPL-3)
- * 16-bit stereo FM synthesizer
- * 20 Voice FM Synthesis
- * Sampling rates up to 44.1 KHz
- * Line-out for headphones, amplified stereo equipment/speakers.
-
- Advanced 12-Bit Digital Audio Recording:
-
- * 12-bit stereo recording and playback
- * Microphone input for speech and sound
- * Stereo line-in for tapes, CD's, other audio sources
- * Record and mix all stereo audio sources - microphone, line-in,
- CD-audio, Digital audio, FM synthesizer
- * Up to 3:1 ADPCM hardware compression
-
- CD-ROM/SCSI description:
-
- * Supports Internal/External CD-ROM Drives
- * CD Audio connector
-
- MIDI Music Interface:
-
- * MIDI Input/Output to standard MIDI equipment
-
- IBM Standard Joystick Port:
-
- * Supports popular analog joy-sticks
-
- 16-Bit PC Interface:
-
- * Fast 16-Bit DMA operation
- * Selectable IRQ, DMA settings
-
- SOUNDvision is compatible with Major Sound Standards:
-
- * Windows with Multi-media, Windows-3.1
- * Ad Lib (Works with Sound Blaster games in Ad Lib Mode)
- * Gold Sound
- * MPC (Multi-media PC)
-
- The package is bundled with several multi-media software
- packages for both DOS and WINDOWS. Here are some descriptions
- paraphrased from the manual:
-
- Sequencer Plus, Jr. is a MIDI recording and editing program. It
- takes advantage of the card's on-board FM synthesizer and MIDI
- interface capabilities.
-
- WinDAT and DosDAT are a multi-media application that allows the user
- to play, record, and edit digital audio files.
-
- Juke Box is an application that lets the user assemble sound events
- into a playlist and then play them in the order they were arranged.
- The playlist can include WAVE and MIDI files and CD-Audio tracks or
- CD-ROM tracks.
-
- Mixer provides direct control over the mixing functions from Windows
- or DOS. It allows the user to set the output volume, the playback
- level of the FM-synthesizer and digital audio, the playback and
- record levels of LINE, MICROPHONE, and CD-ROM audio inputs.
-
- Sound Script is a simple, but powerful multi-media authoring
- language to create scripts combining sound and animation.
-
- Mathematica's TEMPRA which includes Tempra-SHOW and Tempra-GIF for
- presentations, commercial design, and multi-media productions.
- (Similar in concept to AmigaVision.)
-
-
- REVIEW
-
- The SOUNDvision card, along with the popular A2386SX at 25 MHz,
- provide a nice IBM-clone working environment to accent the Amiga. It is
- particularly useful to Amiga BridgeBoard owners because of its ability to
- provide several different functions in a single board. This is crucial for
- BridgeBoard users because the stock A2000 has only one 16-bit ISA slot and
- two 8-bit XT slots, the A3000 has only one 16-bit ISA slot, and the A3000T
- and A4000 have just two 16-bit ISA slots after installing the BridgeBoard
- itself.
-
- Windows V3.1 for IBM-clones installed easily and works well with
- the supplied VGA device driver or with one of the Oak Technologies
- drivers supplied with the SOUNDvision Graphics Drivers Diskette.
-
- The SCSI controller works fine for my CD-ROM drive and reportedly
- can control common SCSI hard disks as well. This would be very useful for
- Amiga users because of our prior familiarity with this family of hard drives.
- With new SCSI hard drives selling for about $1 per megabyte, it would not be
- too expensive to get a drive for this controller. It MAY even be possible to
- use this SCSI controller in parallel with your Amiga SCSI controller and
- common devices. I must point out that this is theoretically possible, but I
- have not tried it and would not suggest you attempt it unless you know what
- you are doing. If it works, it would be very convenient though!
-
-
- DOCUMENTATION
-
- The SOUNDvision board has a detailed, well written manual describing
- the board's theory of operation, installation, and configuration. Switch
- and jumper settings are well described and preset by the factory to the most
- common use setting.
-
- The IRQs and DMA addresses of the board's components are changeable.
- This is important for its use in the Amiga BridgeBoard system, since the
- Janus software that runs the BridgeBoard on the Amiga has certain memory
- addresses and IRQ settings that must not be used to avoid conflicts. The
- ability to alter these settings on any IBM-clone device is essential for
- reliable use an Amiga/BridgeBoard system. I found it unnecessary to change
- any factory settings to get the board to work in harmony with the Amiga and
- Janus software.
-
- The documentation for the board itself is well done with diagrams
- describing the hardware and user actions needed. There is a Quick Start
- section for experienced (read: "I don't read manuals!") users for both a
- plain DOS or WINDOWS environment.
-
- The manual has a small but useful Troubleshooting appendix, as
- well as some pin-out descriptions of the various connectors and memory
- addresses used by the VGA graphics card.
-
- The extra programs (Voyetra, Tempra, Sequencer Plus Jr) all came
- with their own manuals. Voyetra also has an independent 1-800 phone number
- to call to register the program, separate from registering the SOUNDvision
- board with Cardinal.
-
- Overall the documentation is written at a level that a beginner
- should be able to follow, and yet it won't totally bore an expert. :)
-
-
- LIKES AND DISLIKES
-
- The part I like the best about the SOUNDvision is that it gives my
- Amiga BridgeBoard access to the basics of the IBM world's MPC compatibility
- all in one board. Because of the small number of AT slots available to any
- Amiga BridgeBoard user, this is a very important consideration. The fact
- that all components of the SOUNDvision seem to work well alongside the
- Amiga is also a big plus!
-
- As for dislikes, the audio mini-jacks are not (easily)
- interchangeable with Amiga phone-plugs, making a separate set of speakers
- (or conversion cabling) necessary. However, the mini-jacks are IBM/PC
- "standards". For other dislikes, see the BUGS section below.
-
-
- COMPARISON TO OTHER SIMILAR PRODUCTS
-
- I have used a SuperVGA card in this BridgeBoard setup before, and the
- SOUNDvision card compares favorably. It uses the Oak Technology chip for
- its video graphics support and comes with several VGA drivers, though I found
- the plain VGA driver supplied with WINDOWS (V3.1) worked fine.
-
- I used to have a Future Domain 8-bit SCSI controller, and the
- SOUNDvision's SCSI controller works as easily and slightly faster then the
- Future Domain board. I have not personally connected it to a SCSI hard
- drive, but I have heard from several other users who have had no problems
- doing so. In particular, I have heard that a Quantum 105 and a Maxtor drive
- have worked.
-
-
- BUGS
-
- My biggest and only real gripe with the board was that the copy of
- the product I got was missing three floppies and two manuals. In
- particular, the CD-ROM device drivers diskette was not in the package when I
- got it. I got in touch with Cardinal Technologies immediately and they were
- very pleasant on the phone. However, three weeks later I still had
- nothing. I also contacted the vendor I got the board from (via mail order)
- and he told me he would get the missing disks and books from another one of
- his stock and send them to me. They too were not here after 3 weeks. I
- talked with some others who purchased the same board from the same vendor
- and some of them got everything fine, others got two copies of one disk and
- none of another and one person was missing the exact same disks as I was. I
- have now gotten everything I was originally missing, but it appears that
- Cardinal's packaging department took the day off when this batch was put
- together!
-
- Some of the co-reviewers reported problems that some of the supplied
- software did not work for them or other users they know. In particular,
- Tempra-GIF, run either from within the Tempra-Show program or by itself,
- always has a "configuration error" or "out of memory error" when trying to
- load. There is a technical support phone number (toll call) that has not
- been fully utilized at this time.
-
-
- VENDOR SUPPORT
-
- All of the software and hardware has technical support phone
- numbers. The software is all from outside companies, not Cardinal, but
- they are licensed for use with the SOUNDvision board. Also, see the
- above BUGS section.
-
-
- WARRANTY
-
- The board comes with a 1 year warranty that the product will be
- free of defects in workmanship and materials under normal use conditions.
- Software is provided "as is" and is not covered by a warranty.
-
- The warranty is not transferrable.
-
-
- CONCLUSIONS
-
- There are certainly better products available on the market for each
- of the main support areas of the SOUNDvision, but none in this low price,
- all-in-one configuration. The price is important to some of us, but the low
- board count for all of its features is a must for use in an Amiga
- BridgeBoard based system. If you are lucky enough to have your A2000
- modified to support 3 16-bit ISA slots, you have a little room for other
- products; but if you want to use an A3000 or A4000 with only the one ISA
- slot, you certainly need a product like this board.
-
- Overall (after finally getting all the software and manuals!) I
- would rate this board as a 7 out of 10 for its features, speed,
- capabilities, etc. If I also consider the inexpensive cost, I bump up my
- rating to 8.5 out of 10.
-
- I feel it's a great deal for its cost-to-performance ratio.
-
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
-
- Copyright 1993 Richard L. Dyson, David B. Levi, and Chuck Andreas.
- All rights reserved.
-
- --
- Richard L. Dyson INTERNET: dyson@sunfish.Physics.UIowa.EDU
- Graduate Research Assistant INTERNET: rick-dyson@UIowa.EDU
- Department of Physics & Astronomy NSI/SPAN: IOWASP::DYSON or 7231::DYSON
- The University of Iowa Phone (H): (319) 338--6117
- Iowa City, IA 52242--1479 Phone (O): (319) 335--1879
-
- ---
-
- Daniel Barrett, Moderator, comp.sys.amiga.reviews
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