Creative Sound Blaster Live Ct4760 Windows 10 Driver

Creative Sound Blaster Live Ct4760 Windows 10 Driver Average ratng: 3,6/5 2643 reviews

Creative Sound Blaster Drivers Download & Update for Windows 10 By Sophie Luo – Last Updated: 1 year ago Driver Download Creative 0 Comment Users with Creative sound blast products, as seen above, are reporting that they are having trouble getting Windows 10 drivers for their Sound Blaster devices, be it Sound Blaster Roar or Sound Blaster Blaze. This package contains drivers, mixer, and diagnostics. It functions as a stand-alone installation or as an update to an existing installation.

Strange question guys hoping Chris from Microsoft can weigh in on this. I have to put an older sound card in my machine (Sound Blaster Live 5.1). My speakers quit working (2.1 set) and my niece gave me a set of Creative 5.1 speakers. Unfortunately the onboard sound doesn't support 5.1 (god only knows how long I've had this card).

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To my question.will the native Windows 10 drivers run that SB Live card and will it run the 5.1 speakers? Creative isn't doing drivers for this card for 10. To those of you that say get a new card.no can do. I have 2 internal cdroms (cdrom and dvd) and need to be able to hook the audio for both to the sound card. The newer SB cards don't support that hookup.

RF OUT: This output enables the connection of another receiver. Windows receiver (beta) • S/PDIF: This digital audio output is used to connect to AV amplifier “COAXIAL” input. For Room 2 only: RF IN:This input port is to connect the coaxial cable from your Cable Network provider.

You think that's wierd? Check out how I have to hook up the 5.1's. It involves 2 computers, first (if the above answer is positive) with a 5.1 sound card and the second with regular 2.1 sound card, a set of 5.1 speakers and a KVM switch with audio support. Cabling will be strange but should work electrically.

If your interested I'll elucidate further. Could someone please tag Chris from Microsoft? John Krenn wrote: To those of you that say get a new card.no can do. I have 2 internal cdroms (cdrom and dvd) and need to be able to hook the audio for both to the sound card.

This bit got me - the analogue 3 (or 4) pin cable you talk of went away with IDE - please don't tell me you're still using IDE and Windows 10 - and if you are not, why do you eve need this connection? As for 5.1 sound - if you get 2 speakers of the 5 working you are no worse off than you used to be - but for what it's worth, even if you output audio over HDMI, SPDIF or Coax, the CD/DVD drives sound will still play - you really should ignore the old way of connecting things if you want to move forward.

John Krenn wrote: To those of you that say get a new card.no can do. I have 2 internal cdroms (cdrom and dvd) and need to be able to hook the audio for both to the sound card. This bit got me - the analogue 3 (or 4) pin cable you talk of went away with IDE - please don't tell me you're still using IDE and Windows 10 - and if you are not, why do you eve need this connection? As for 5.1 sound - if you get 2 speakers of the 5 working you are no worse off than you used to be - but for what it's worth, even if you output audio over HDMI, SPDIF or Coax, the CD/DVD drives sound will still play - you really should ignore the old way of connecting things if you want to move forward. I haven't owned a sound card since modern graphics cards have DP/HDMI outputs and supported audio, these connections also support DTS-HD, DD5.1 and so many more sound formats as well as the old PCM output - unless you are doing audio editing or require a specific dedicated sound card, on-board sound is typically enough for most people - it's only hardcore audiophiles that go the dedicated route these days or those who don't want the sound coming out of their TV/monitor but a set of dedicated surround speakers/headphones. I even have a SoundBlaster Fatal1ty professional in an old PC that hasn't been used since it came out. For RodIT, yes I'm still using ide for my cd drives.

My HD's are sata. Gotta watch my pennies.

Both are burners, one is dvd and the other is cdrom, couldn't afford sata cd drives on top of the rest of the rest of the changes. And reread my OP.

Creative

Not all motherboards support 5.1 speakers and these speakers were given to me and being the tech I am, if I have equipment in place it dang sure better work 100%. I understand you can get sound using only 2 of the 5 speakers, but that ain't 100% is it? If 10 supports the SB Live 5.1, I'm good to go. Edited Feb 14, 2016 at 23:36 UTC. SBL 5.1's latest driver support officially was XP, the fact there is any support at all with windows 10 is pot luck.

I don't need to re-read your OP - I see now you have Win10 running on something old, to still have and be using IDE, well, support is going to be limited - back when IDE was around the whole reason you had the analogue CD audio was because IDE was limited and back then digital stereo sound was a bonus - I will confirm what you said - not all motherboards support 5.1 sound - but all modern, within the last couple of years do - in fact most support 7.1. I can accept money doesn't grow on trees, but running the latest OS on old kit is hit and miss - you take the risk of things not working. I would gladly donate 2 DVD writers and a soundcard if you lived in the UK - since even those a few years old are worthless - the only reason I still have them is they would sell for less than pennies. I haven't used CDs or DVDs since the release of USB drives, my current PC doesn't even have any, and I haven't missed them. I wish you luck, but I think a second hand eBay sound card is something you should consider. John Krenn wrote: To my question.will the native Windows 10 drivers run that SB Live card and will it run the 5.1 speakers?