English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have an Creative Audigy DF80 and it works fine on analog stereo output. [i haven't tryed 5.1 analog output]. On the digital out jack, the sound card should send digital signal throught a mono jack linked to a RCA jack, using an external AC3 decoder. [My decoder is working fine... Sony STR-DE695]. Now the problem is that using "digital output only" my sound stops for like a second than works again. On my decoder appears again the input [PCM 48 kHz] or Dolby Digital 3/2.1 [depends on what i listen or watch. What could the problem be?? Is my cable not good for this tipe of connection? [thought it's new...]

2006-10-18 08:49:25 · 5 answers · asked by F.T. 1 in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

I have installed drivers from creative web site. I use the software from an audigy 2 cd.

2006-10-18 19:35:15 · update #1

5 answers

"Welcome to the World of Tomorrow!" you may be suffering from what I refer to as "lag" this phenomenon, is the result of something impeding/interrupting the flow of the information on a wire/cable. When we put a male connector into a female connector, the contacts have to line up for the signal to pass through, sometimes the oils from our hands can build onto the contacts and create an isolator, thus blocking those electrons from passing from one connector to the other. My best advice is to use a cloth when handling the contacts. Another thing you may want are gold plated contacts/cables, since gold conducts better than silver, the transfer should be a little better. On a personal note, I just switched to a digital cable system, and every time I flip the channel there is a lag that a occurs between the cable line, and my digital receiver, its probably the same thing your experiencing, only in a different form.

2006-10-24 02:08:16 · answer #1 · answered by brians018883 1 · 0 0

Do because it says, get the driving force from the producer. Or use the domicile windows automatic seek option to aim to seek for the driving force. If this is an on-board sound card then seek for the make and type of the motherboard and it may enable you to already know the sound card this is making use of. next time, write down each and all of the make/type of all your peripherals formerly formatting. this protects an excellent form of time and attempt.

2016-12-08 16:57:11 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Try reloading the drivers to the sound card. Uninstall it then reinstall it. Sometimes drivers get corrupt.

2006-10-18 16:06:17 · answer #3 · answered by mittalman53 5 · 0 0

Need to updat your PC

2006-10-18 08:57:05 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Nothing seems wrong

2006-10-18 09:02:25 · answer #5 · answered by efrenchinkrungthep 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers