Try installing the ASIO drivers. Search for ASIO4ALL.
REW issues - popping, static in frequency sweep output.
Hi All,
I'm using an HP Win 10 Pro, headphone jack out via RCA adapter to the amp and a MiniDSP calibrated mic.
I've read all the help files and adjusted the sound card output to 16 bit which helped but did not eliminate the popping/static noise in the test sound. In my set up the sound card cannot be calibrated and I've adjusted everything I can find.
Has anyone experienced the same problem and solved it?
Thank you.
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- 25 posts total
@mahler123 REW: A room equalization wizard that generates and measures a frequency sweep or pink noise signal for determining required room correction. @macg19: From the data, seems like you successfully isolated the problem to the mike or mic-computer interface. I am still focused on clipping due to overloading an output-input interface, a bad wire or connection, or simply a bad mic since all of @richardbrand and @jpag excellent recommendations did not isolate root cause. I am sure you did, but I will ask anyway … did you calibrate the mic according to the REW OEM’s instructions? Did you contact the REW OEM for recommendations? I will now bow to the others here more knowledgeable on computer interfaces Good luck. |
I am sorry, one other thought came to mind. Probably not the case based on your computer but worth discussing for a complete root cause analysis. If you computer buffer is not large enough or fast enough, the measured audio signal may not be able to process the data completely, resulting in the popping sound you are experiencing. Increasing buffer size and turning off as many background programs as possible may assist. The counterpoint to this is you only experience the anomaly when using the external mic, and not with the computer mic; so, the buffer may be adequate. Regardless, I would tolerance stack the OEM buffer requirements for speed and size against your hardware. |
OP:
That answers my question. No, you did not connect your speakers directly to your laptop. You have an amplifier in the middle, which is correct.
This sounds like a potential internal power issue. Really suggest you go the external DAC route. |
- 25 posts total

