I've used some sound cards along with REW in the past and it works well for distortion measurements. As you've probably already seen, all you need is a simple voltage divider to limit the voltage fed to the soundcard in order to test. You can go quite simple in the dividers design. Early on I built an RCA cord with the resistors cobbled into the cord. However if you plan to use it a lot the best thing to do is to build one of the manual attenuators that has protection diodes built into the circuit to keep from blowing your sound cards input. One over voltage event and your sound card is toast. I attached a document I found that has the build up of a simple attenuator.
You could also look at an older Quantasylum QA400. They can be had for around $100 - $150. You'll still need an attenuator for the QA400 as it is essentially a purpose built sound card but it has specialized software for measuring audio gear. The only downside to the QA400 is that the older software for it will only work on Win7 and older computers. I still own a QA400 and it works well if you have an older version of Windows to run it. If you want to drop about $500 there is a newer QA402 that will be coming later this spring. The QA402 will have much improved specs, a fully autoranging input using relays (no attenuator needed) and Win10 compatible software. The measurement capabilities of a QA402 should exceed just about anything most DIYers will measure.
You could also look at an older Quantasylum QA400. They can be had for around $100 - $150. You'll still need an attenuator for the QA400 as it is essentially a purpose built sound card but it has specialized software for measuring audio gear. The only downside to the QA400 is that the older software for it will only work on Win7 and older computers. I still own a QA400 and it works well if you have an older version of Windows to run it. If you want to drop about $500 there is a newer QA402 that will be coming later this spring. The QA402 will have much improved specs, a fully autoranging input using relays (no attenuator needed) and Win10 compatible software. The measurement capabilities of a QA402 should exceed just about anything most DIYers will measure.
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