P
phaedrus
Guest
Hi all,
I blew my laptop sound card somehow. Not sure why it blew, but it was
working fine until I plugged a mic pre-amp into its mic socket to
record some voice. Strange thing is, I have done this before many many
times with the same settings, input mic, voltage supply, and its never
complained before. This time however, it's blown it, it seems. And
it's not a separate board, but built into the motherboard.
Obviously a re-boot hasn't solved the problem. Neither did trying to
play audio via Linux instead of Windows. So it has to be a hardware
failure. But the symptoms are not normal. If it had been a case that I
had whacked too much power into the input, I would expect the initial
amplifier stage to fail resulting in mostly just very low output audio
levels. But what I get is more like I blew the speakers on a home
stereo by turning up the volume far too loud. It sounds really raspy
like the speaker coils have partly decatched from their cones! Tried
using known-good earphones from the earphone socket, but the result is
the same.
I am gonna have to trash this lappie if someone here can't think of
something I might have overlooked. Any suggestions?
Thanks,
VLC.
I blew my laptop sound card somehow. Not sure why it blew, but it was
working fine until I plugged a mic pre-amp into its mic socket to
record some voice. Strange thing is, I have done this before many many
times with the same settings, input mic, voltage supply, and its never
complained before. This time however, it's blown it, it seems. And
it's not a separate board, but built into the motherboard.
Obviously a re-boot hasn't solved the problem. Neither did trying to
play audio via Linux instead of Windows. So it has to be a hardware
failure. But the symptoms are not normal. If it had been a case that I
had whacked too much power into the input, I would expect the initial
amplifier stage to fail resulting in mostly just very low output audio
levels. But what I get is more like I blew the speakers on a home
stereo by turning up the volume far too loud. It sounds really raspy
like the speaker coils have partly decatched from their cones! Tried
using known-good earphones from the earphone socket, but the result is
the same.
I am gonna have to trash this lappie if someone here can't think of
something I might have overlooked. Any suggestions?
Thanks,
VLC.