S shyamt New member Local time 8:37 PM Messages 28 Sep 11, 2009 #1 Hi - Please could someone explain to me how I can get 360 audios through the speakers connected to my Windows 7 OS PC? There is a guide here, but I can't do it on Windows 7, as the interface is completely difference.. Thanks in advance! My Computer My Computer OSWindows 7
Hi - Please could someone explain to me how I can get 360 audios through the speakers connected to my Windows 7 OS PC? There is a guide here, but I can't do it on Windows 7, as the interface is completely difference.. Thanks in advance!
phantomgrave New member Local time 8:37 PM Messages 8 Location Texas Sep 11, 2009 #2 This should be able to do what you want: Right click on the speaker in the notification area and Playback Devices. Then click the Recording tab, select microphone, then click Properties. In the Listen tab check "Listen to this device." My Computer My Computer Computer Manufacturer/Model NumberCustom BuiltOSWindows 7 Pro x64CPUC2D E8400MotherboardGigabyte EP43-DS3LMemory4GB Corsair XMS2 PC6400Graphics Card(s)eVGA 9800GTMonitor(s) DisplaysLG Flatron W2353V 23" 1080PScreen Resolution1920x1080Hard DrivesWD 160GB + 500GB ExternalPSUAntc TruePower II 550WCaseAntec 900CoolingStockKeyboardSaitek EclipseMouseLogitech MX518Internet Speed3Mbps Down/512Kbps Up
This should be able to do what you want: Right click on the speaker in the notification area and Playback Devices. Then click the Recording tab, select microphone, then click Properties. In the Listen tab check "Listen to this device."
S shyamt New member Thread Starter Local time 8:37 PM Messages 28 Sep 11, 2009 #3 Thanks I just kind of figured out that out for myself, but did it through the 'line in' instead. The only problem is, sound is a bit crackly.. Any ideas? Thanks! My Computer My Computer OSWindows 7
Thanks I just kind of figured out that out for myself, but did it through the 'line in' instead. The only problem is, sound is a bit crackly.. Any ideas? Thanks!
torrentg New member Local time 9:37 PM Messages 5,747 Sep 11, 2009 #4 Crackly sound is indicative of incorrect frequency. Try setting the 360 to 44.1 kHz or the input on the PC to 48 kHz. My Computer My Computer Computer Manufacturer/Model Numberself builtOS7600.20510 x86CPUP4 550 3.4 GHz HT running at 3.5 GHzMotherboardMSI PM8M3-V (MS-7211 v1.x) Micro-ATX mainboardMemoryOCZ 2 GB(2x1GB) DDR400mHz running @ 414 mHzGraphics Card(s)HIS Radeon HD 3850 IceQ 3 Turbo HDMI Dual DL-DVI AGPSound CardMOTU Traveler firewire studio interface 192 kHz 24 bitMonitor(s) Displays22" widescreen Acer X223W LCD, 17" Compaq P75 CRTScreen Resolution1680x1050 and 1280x1024Hard DrivesSATA I x2 WD, 400 GB and 120 GB, SATA 2 WD Caviar Black 1 TBPSU350W genericCaseCybertronpc, it glows blueCoolingstock cpu fan, Ice-Q 3 gpu and system, many case fansKeyboardLogitch Classical Keyboard 200MouseLogitech Mediaplay cordlessInternet Speed1792/448 kbits/secOther InfoSATA II PCI fake RAID adapter, 1 GB Readyboost, original ATI Remote Wonder (even works with WMC perfectly), Logitech Rumblepad 2 game controller x2
Crackly sound is indicative of incorrect frequency. Try setting the 360 to 44.1 kHz or the input on the PC to 48 kHz.
S shyamt New member Thread Starter Local time 8:37 PM Messages 28 Sep 12, 2009 #5 torrentg said: Crackly sound is indicative of incorrect frequency. Try setting the 360 to 44.1 kHz or the input on the PC to 48 kHz. Click to expand... Is that for the speakers or microphone on the PC, as microphone is already on 48 KHz.. I can't find the setting on the 360 though. Thanks My Computer My Computer OSWindows 7
torrentg said: Crackly sound is indicative of incorrect frequency. Try setting the 360 to 44.1 kHz or the input on the PC to 48 kHz. Click to expand... Is that for the speakers or microphone on the PC, as microphone is already on 48 KHz.. I can't find the setting on the 360 though. Thanks