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Creative Wave Blaster
MIDI synthesizer
MIDI synthesizer

The Wave Blaster was an add-on MIDI-synthesizer for Creative Sound Blaster 16 and Sound Blaster AWE32 family of PC soundcards. It was a sample-based synthesis General MIDI compliant synthesizer. For General MIDI scores, the Wave Blaster's wavetable-engine produced more realistic instrumental music than the SB16's onboard Yamaha-OPL3.
The Wave Blaster attached to a SB16 through a 26-pin expansion-header, eliminating the need for extra cabling between the SB16 and the Wave Blaster. The SB16 emulated an MPU-401 UART, giving existing MIDI-software the option to send MIDI-sequences directly to the attached Wave Blaster, instead of driving an external MIDI-device. The Wave Blaster's analog stereo-output fed into a dedicated line-in on the SB16, where the onboard-mixer allowed equalization, mixing, and volume adjustment.
The Wave Blaster port was adopted by other sound card manufacturers who produced both daughterboards and soundcards with the expansion-header: Diamond, Ensoniq, Guillemot, Oberheim, Orchid, Roland, TerraTec, Turtle Beach, and Yamaha. The header also appeared on devices such as the Korg NX5R MIDI sound module, the Oberheim MC-1000/MC-2000 keyboards, and the TerraTec Axon AX-100 Guitar-to-MIDI converter.
Since 2000, Wave Blaster-capable sound cards for computers are becoming rare. In 2005, Terratec released a new Wave Blaster daughterboard called the Wave XTable with 16mb of on-board sample memory comprising 500 instruments and 10 drum kits. In 2014, a new compatible card called Dreamblaster S1 was produced by the Belgian company Serdaco. In 2015 that same company released a high end card named Dreamblaster X1, comparable to Yamaha and Roland cards. In 2016 DreamBlaster X2 was released, a board with both a Wave Blaster interface and a USB interface.
Wave Blaster II

By the time the SB16 reached the height of its popularity, competing MIDI-daughterboards had already pushed aside the Wave Blaster. In particular, Roland's Sound Canvas daughterboards (SCD-10/15), priced higher than Creative's offering, were highly regarded for their unrivalled musical reproduction in MIDI-scored game titles. (This was due to Roland's dominance in the production aspect of the MIDI game soundtracks; Roland's daughterboards shared the same synthesis-engine and instrument sound-set as the popular Sound Canvas 55, a commercial MIDI module favored by game composers.) By comparison, the Wave Blaster's instruments were improperly balanced, with many instruments striking at different volume-levels (relative to the de facto standard, Sound Canvas.)
Reception
Computer Gaming World in 1993 praised the Wave Blaster's audio quality and stated that the card was the best wave-table synthesis device for those with a compatible sound card.
Wave Blaster connector pinout
| Pin | Function | Pin | Function | 1 | DGnd | 2 | - | 3 | DGnd | 4 | TTL-MIDI input | 5 | DGnd | 6 | +5 Volts | 7 | DGnd | 8 | TTL-MIDI output | 9 | DGnd | 10 | +5 Volts | 11 | DGnd | 12 | Audio R in | 13 | - | 14 | +5 Volts | 15 | AGnd | 16 | Audio L in | 17 | AGnd | 18 | +12 Volts | 19 | AGnd | 20 | Audio R out | 21 | AGnd | 22 | -12 Volts | 23 | AGnd | 24 | Audio L out | 25 | AGnd | 26 | !Reset |
|---|
- AGnd = Analog ground
- DGnd = Digital ground
- Some Wave Blaster cards offer audio inputs (Yamaha DB50XG)
- Some Wave Blaster cards offer TTL-MIDI output
- Reset is active low
References
References
- Ridge, Peter M.. (1994). "Sound Blaster The Official Book". [[McGraw-Hill]].
- (October 1993). "CGW Sound Card Survey".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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