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Laptop Speakers Too Quiet

New laptop makes quiet "bzzt" what is it?

I have had a compaq Presaria V2424NR for almost 2 years now and it does the exact same thing, it is loud! It has been that way since the day I bought it. At first the noise bothered me a little, but now I am use to it. That is the only drawback with the Presario laptop, it is too noisy.

My laptop's speakers suddenly broke. How can I fix this?

Hmmm… It’s either Hardware, or Software. if Hardware, you’re in for some major surgery & I can’t help you. On the Software side, I’d suggest a few (very general) things:Check all of your sound configurations. Anything there? If no:Download a Linux Distro. (Ubuntu is easy) & either burn it to a DVD, or install it on a USB thumb DriveBoot Linux (but DO NOT INSTALL IT!)Then play a movie, youTube video, whatever. If still just beeps, it’s Hardware. If it plays, it’s definitely Software.If it is Software & you just can’t find the problem, do the Nuclear Option: Save off your stuff; wipe & reload the OS & your Programs; & reload your stuff.I hope that this helps a bit.

How do I fix my laptop speakers which have too much bass?

Most modern Windows laptops use audio technology from Realtek — if that doesn’t apply to you, the following won’t work, but if it does, read on.The Realtek software package includes a graphic equalizer feature that allows you to reduce or increase any portion of the audible spectrum. Go to Windows Control Panel, click “Hardware and Sound,” click “Realtek HD Audio Manager” and then the “Sound Effects” tab. On the resulting screen, to the right of the “Reset” button, there is another button with a crude little picture of an an audio equalizer — click on that and adjust to your heart’s content.

How do I fix my Dell Inspiron [1440] Laptop Speakers?

My Dell Inspiron Speakers are making kind of a static noise when i try to watch videos or listen to music or anything, i tried plugging headphones in and they still have static, i don't know what the problem could be.. Anyone know what the problem could be?

My laptop speaker is getting cracking sounds! What can I do to solve it?

You’ve likely been playing sound at a volume that was too loud for the speakers, for far too long.Crackling during audio playback, especially if it gets progressively worse AND it is always present to some degree, is typically a sign of blown speakers. It is possible that some audio files were encoded improperly, or that they included distortion that would sound like crackling… but that would be intermittent, or only present when you played those audio files.Laptop speakers weren’t meant to be used at near full volume for the majority of their use. That’s what would blow them though. If you regularly used your laptop to fill a room with sound, the speakers wouldn’t last much longer than a couple of years.At any rate, you can hope that it is the speakers, because they would be relatively inexpensive to replace or work around. A search on eBay for your model laptop and the word “speakers’ might turn up a few people who are selling the parts of their laptop. You might do a Google search for your model laptop and the word “speakers” to find a retailer selling a set.If the problem is caused by the audio chipset… well… for one thing, you’d hear the crackling in headphones and from the speakers. I don’t know if that is what is happening, but I can say that it would be one way to see if it was the speakers.So… crackling in the speakers, but it goes away with heaphones or earbuds? Get new speakers. Crackling in the speakers and the heaphones? That’s either something in the OS, or the chipset. Boot to a Linux LiveCD. Still crackles? Then it is hardware. Crackling go away with Linux at the same volumes? Problem is somewhere in your installation of Windows.What can you do to solve it? Diagnose the problem down to the cause.

How can I fix my speaker problem?

There might be some problem with headphone DRIVERS in your Laptop. Try to update it or disable and enable it.Try some other headphone it might not be compatible.Go to service centre it issue is not fixed.Try formatting if needed (this is last option I would suggest).THANKS TO A2A.

A buzz sound is coming from my laptop's speaker when I play any media file. How do I fix it?

Dont play music too loud on your laptop speaker.The speaker film become loose and that makes the noise..Its a hardware issue.. You can fix it..If there is dust on the film of speaker clean it..Avoid dust to deposit on it

Are laptop speakers damaged by listening at full volume?

The bottom line is yes, this can damage the speakers, and the sound system as a whole. All sound systems, including the one built into your TV, use amplifiers and speakers. The amplifiers power the speakers, and the speakers create the sound. When you turn up music on your TV, you are putting more and more power from the amplifier to the speakers. While your speakers do have a maximum amount of power they can safely handle, it is unlikely that the manufacturer would put an amplifier in the TV that could overpower them. The danger instead lies in the limits of your amplifier. All Amplifiers have a limit to what they can do. The higher you put the volume, the harder your amp is working. Once you turn the volume up past the point where your amplifier can safely operate, the amplifier still attempts to go louder. At this point the amp sends “dirty power” or “faulted” or “clipped power.” This type of power has sudden spikes of wattage that can severely damage your speaker and/or your amplifier. The best way to tell whether or not you are hurting your speakers is through a good listening test. If your music is not distorting at all, it is unlikely you are pushing your amp significantly past its limits if any. If you do hear some distortion, you are risking the integrity of your sound system. Just for reference, it is normally extremely low notes and extremely high notes that distort first. Please keep in mind that even if you are not running your system past its limits, long term full capacity use can also be very tough on a system. Speakers do wear over time, and amps do run hot and burn out over time. Safety first :)

Monitor and External speakers problem..?

So I just bought an HP w2216h from a friend, and I'm using it as a TV for cable and to play my xbox and such using the hdmi cable. Although the monitor speakers work fine, they're much too quiet with not enough lower frequencies. I've plugged in my external powered speakers meant for my laptop as well as my guitar amp and some headphones and cannot get sound to play. And nothing should be wrong with the jack, as my friend tested it prior and it worked fine. I've also seen it in use.
Any suggestions??

How do you make a bluetooth/portable speaker louder?

About the only way (once you’ve turned up the source volume to the point of distortion) is to improve the coupling of the speaker to the room, and focus the sound more in your direction and less in other directions.I’ve seen creative solutions using carved wood, or even red beer cups, but any container that is roughly horn-shaped (expanding towards the opening) will improve things if pointed towards you, whether trash cans or 2 liter bottles cut open (I didn’t say they’d LOOK good).Putting the speaker in a corner will also bounce more of the sound away from the walls and towards the listener.Otherwise, positioning the speaker as close as possible to your listening location at ear height is your only option for getting more of the sound into your ears.One more point: if you have any equalization in the chain, defeat it, or at least only use it to CUT the lowest bass octave, which your portable speaker probably won’t be able to physically reproduce, but which will eat up most of your amplifier power in a vain attempt to make bass. If you don’t have many equalizer bands, reduce the bass by ear, usually the deeper bass will get cut first while having less of an effect on sound the speaker might actually be able to reproduce. Also, do NOT boost all the bands, this just introduces piles of phase shift and wildly inaccurate frequency response, and you want to do as little of this as possible to retain at least some semblance of the original sound. The one exception is if there’s an overall level control (rather than a frequency control) - if you can still add more gain here, you might be able to squeeze out a bit more volume (only if something else in the audio chain isn’t quite up to snuff in output, and this might help compensate for that). Probably not, though - if it doesn’t get louder this way, bring it back to zero just to minimize the number of places where you may be introducing clipping. But still roll off what deep bass you can, since you’ll never hear it, but it’ll drain your amp and speaker capabilities trying.

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