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#1
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I have a Dell laptop which I bought used. I can't get the volume on the
speakers to go up high enough so I can hear them well. I set the volume in the control panel up all the way and it's still not loud enouch. Is there anything I can do? |
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#2
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Robert wrote:
I have a Dell laptop which I bought used. I can't get the volume on the speakers to go up high enough so I can hear them well. I set the volume in the control panel up all the way and it's still not loud enouch. Is there anything I can do? Did you also check if the other sliders, like WAV(e) were something above the minimal setting? You probably just moved the master volume slider. Now you have to set the OTHER sliders for the type of audio being played. Double-click on the sound tray icon to see the mixer-style Volume Control panel. Also remember that speakers in laptops really suck. If you want to have good audio, either connect a pair of powered external speakers or get a decent headset. |
#3
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Adding to the comprehensive advice given by "VanguardLH" ; mind also, that
there is a separate volume control on Media Player (your current one AND the old "mplayer2.exe" which is still included with XP). This is in addition to the separate controls for "Master Volume" and "WAVE Out" controls on the "sndvol32.exe" application (brought up by double-clicking the taskbar "speaker" icon) that "VanguardLH" noted. == Cheers, Tim Meddick, Peckham, London. :-) "Robert" wrote in message ... I have a Dell laptop which I bought used. I can't get the volume on the speakers to go up high enough so I can hear them well. I set the volume in the control panel up all the way and it's still not loud enouch. Is there anything I can do? |
#4
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I found the problem. On youtube there is a volume slider and when I
moved that the volume got much louder. A friend pointed that out to me. I didn't know. Sorry for the trouble. "Tim Meddick" wrote in : Adding to the comprehensive advice given by "VanguardLH" ; mind also, that there is a separate volume control on Media Player (your current one AND the old "mplayer2.exe" which is still included with XP). This is in addition to the separate controls for "Master Volume" and "WAVE Out" controls on the "sndvol32.exe" application (brought up by double-clicking the taskbar "speaker" icon) that "VanguardLH" noted. == Cheers, Tim Meddick, Peckham, London. :-) "Robert" wrote in message ... I have a Dell laptop which I bought used. I can't get the volume on the speakers to go up high enough so I can hear them well. I set the volume in the control panel up all the way and it's still not loud enouch. Is there anything I can do? |
#5
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I found the problem. On youtube there is a volume slider and when I moved
that the volume got much louder. A friend pointed that out to me. I didn't know. Sorry for the trouble. VanguardLH wrote in : Robert wrote: I have a Dell laptop which I bought used. I can't get the volume on the speakers to go up high enough so I can hear them well. I set the volume in the control panel up all the way and it's still not loud enouch. Is there anything I can do? Did you also check if the other sliders, like WAV(e) were something above the minimal setting? You probably just moved the master volume slider. Now you have to set the OTHER sliders for the type of audio being played. Double-click on the sound tray icon to see the mixer-style Volume Control panel. Also remember that speakers in laptops really suck. If you want to have good audio, either connect a pair of powered external speakers or get a decent headset. |
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