Reply 20 of 25, by ux-3
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- Oldbie
It really matters what you want to play. If you want to play a somewhat older game like Wing Commander Privateer, you will find that many creative cards from SB16 to SB32 just sound awful. This is called the DMA clicking bug. It isn't minor, it ruins the experience. If you however take a really cheap ESS 688 or 1868, you usually get a much cleaner audio experience with the game.
For my 486, I had the first SB16 card (CT-1740ASP), fully jumpered and with the working 4.04 DSP. A perfect card on paper. But the moment you want to play something, you are greeted by noise, crackling and poor sound. It is shelved for testing duty only. The job in the 486 is given to a cheap ESS 1868F, which sounds much smoother. I had the yamaha 719 and the CMI 8330 in there for comparison, but prefered the ESS filtering. But that is a personal preference, also dictated by the need for a wavetable header and not much need for SB16 compatibility. Without that need, my even cheaper ESS 688 with yamaha OPL would have the job.
If I were in your shoes, dealing with a P150, I would probably like to use a SB64AWE. As this avoids most bugs of the 16/32 era, but brings some compromises and limitations instead. They are not cheap these days either.
Retro PC warning: The things you own end up owning you.