Hopefully you have the loopback cable in place and are using the correct splitter adapters.
Are you observing any input VU meter level at all?
brucek
Hopefully you have the loopback cable in place and are using the correct splitter adapters.It always indicates the error "very low signal level"
Yes I have the loopback cable in place and have the correct splitter in place.Hopefully you have the loopback cable in place and are using the correct splitter adapters.
Are you observing any input VU meter level at all?
brucek
No, it should be fine.Is my sound card not good enough?
OK.I'm using windows vista.
Just tried it and yes, I can hear the signal.So you are linking the green output jack to the blue input jack on the rear panel connections? If you leave the green output jack connected to your front speakers can you hear signals if you use the REW signal generator?
Checked the settings and they're ok. Changed the cables several times. same. Should I be using mono jacks instead?OK.
Usually Vista won't allow REW selection to the soundcard (as in XP) and so you must have the card selected as Default in Windows.
The Windows devices menus for Record and Playback should show the line-in muted for playback and unmuted for recording as show in the example jpgs below.
Playback Mixer
View attachment 14303
Recording Mixer
View attachment 14304
If that's all fine, then you have a problem likely with the cabling or stereo adapter you are using to break out the right and left channels.
Can you show me a jpg of your REW Settings page?
brucek
No, you need a stereo adapter that splits the signal into its left and right channel, so you can calibrate and use the right channel.Should I be using mono jacks instead?
Just use a graphics program to reduce them to ~800 wide for posting.Sizes are too big
Here are the pics.OK.
Usually Vista won't allow REW selection to the soundcard (as in XP) and so you must have the card selected as Default in Windows.
The Windows devices menus for Record and Playback should show the line-in muted for playback and unmuted for recording as show in the example jpgs below.
Playback Mixer
View attachment 14303
Recording Mixer
View attachment 14304
If that's all fine, then you have a problem likely with the cabling or stereo adapter you are using to break out the right and left channels.
Can you show me a jpg of your REW Settings page?
brucek
Windows Paint is the easiest. Simply select whatever application you want captured on the screen with your cursor and then press Alt plus PrtScr keys. This saves the image on the Windows clipboard.What software do you use to capture the screen images anyway?
Thanks. For the help. I really wanted to make this work. I guess I will just try one of the USB soundcards.Windows Paint is the easiest. Simply select whatever application you want captured on the screen with your cursor and then press Alt plus PrtScr keys. This saves the image on the Windows clipboard.
Start Paint and paste the clipboard into it and save as a jpg file.
Well, everything looks fine, so you've stumped me on this one. It simply looks like the line-in is not working, for some reason. I have no idea.
brucek
Yep I tried every possible setting combination on that too. I tested my line-in with a signal from a CD player. REW and windows both acknowledge the signal. Used the same cables too. Unbelievable. Still nothing.:gah:FWIW- When I tried on my system, selecting "Default Output" and "Default Input" in the settings, I could not get a reading. I had to select "SPEAKER" and "Line_In". Also every time I brought up the settings screen, for some reason it would disable the Line_In input on the Windows Mixer.
So if you can hear the test signal on your speakers from the green output connector and you can get signal level on the blue line in with an external source, the problem has to lie with your breakout cables. Are you sure they are stereo breakouts at the jackplug end, not mono?I tested my line-in with a signal from a CD player. REW and windows both acknowledge the signal. Used the same cables too. Unbelievable. Still nothing.:gah:
Yes they are stereo...and these breakout cables were the same ones that I used to test the CD player from the RCA outs. I'm really going nuts with this.So if you can hear the test signal on your speakers from the green output connector and you can get signal level on the blue line in with an external source, the problem has to lie with your breakout cables. Are you sure they are stereo breakouts at the jackplug end, not mono?
There is a setting in the LineIn enhancements titled " DC offset cancellation". I tried using with this on/off to no sucess. In fact, i tried all settings possible here.Hi,
perhaps there is a monitoring option which is activated/inactivated. Look at your Sound-Configuration Record -> LineIn -> LineIn-Properties -> Advanced (or General). Maybe there's the reason why...