Debriefing > Off-Topic Lounge
Less-Than-Shite Performance
Rodney 1.666:
--- Quote from: osaeed2k9 on October 14, 2011, 06:42:03 pm ---I use Acronis, but the problem is its not free.
--- End quote ---
I was looking at that one last night and gave the trial a shot, but cloning is not available in the trial. >_>
Still on the table, though.
~Edit: Readied a Clonezilla USB stick as suggested by my IT prof and will clone tomorrow, for science.
Rodney 1.666:
Again it's just easier to post here rather than create an entire thread for it.
I have a festering troll of a problem that just refuses to leave me alone, and it's blasted bloody speaker noise. I used to have just bare-bones stereo speakers. I then upgraded to 2.1 near the beginning of the year, and for whatever reason that escapes me, the speakers emit a constant fuzzing sound. After trying different cables and different devices and finally just plugging everything into the wall sans inputs I concluded that as long as the speakers have power, they emit that fuzzing noise; and it's not like a quiet subtle sound either; if you stop and listen you can hear it across the room.
So being fed up with those I upgraded again to 5.1 today with these guys (Logitech Z506).
And guess what. Same shit just not as bad, and sounds like a hard drive that's working in the background. I went through the same diagnostics as last time and conclude that as long as they're receiving power, they do this, and all five of them do it (center channel is the worst, followed by the FL & FR, then the RL & RR). Actually if the center is connected its noise is even worse than the last set.
If it means anything I'll also point out that with the previous 2.1 set, the higher the volume on the physical dial the louder the noise. With this 5.1 set it's constant regardless of volume.
I suspected that it may be line noise as I just have the sub plugged into a 6-tap with four other things plugged into it (if that's at all how that works), so I relocated to a power bar and then an extension cord and... same thing.
Important note, for whatever reason, one particular time I reseated the VGA-esc cable that connects the main (has the vol-knob) front-right to the sub, the hard-disk-noise just quit. All was well for a few hours and now it's doing it again. >< Thus I don't have a stance on connection integrity.
So do I just have horribly shit luck with audio or is there anything at all I can do?
tl;dr version:
Two sets of speakers that emit fuzzing noises as long as power is applied. Really, really shitty coincidence or something I'm missing?
major:
I have the same speakers and mine do the same.
I even have a good Asus Soundcard. Computer can be off, and still will get static. I really think its the quality of the wire they use, but who knows.
I use to get bad interference with my PS3 plugged in, then upgraded the cable and no more static via PS3.
Jonathon [SSL]:
I have z506's as well. It's just what you get for paying $100 for 5 speakers and a subwoofer; the quality is crap. If it really bothers you, call Logitech support and ask them if they can send you new ones. My first set conked out after 2 months (center speaker died), and they set me a new set at no charge.
I don't really rely on my z506's for accurate playback due to the difficulty in getting the audio to balance correctly, I mostly only use them for gaming, watching movies, and listening to music. Whenever I do audio/music production or video editing, I switch to my 10-year old 2.1 Altec speakers which have fantastic quality but are missing that awesome immersive feel you get from surround sound.
Unless you pay like $500 a speaker you're always going to have that hissing sound.
jjmusicnotes:
Well, not necessarily. There are a number of factors that can influence speaker sound. Wiring can be an issue, but different problems cause different sounds. For example, if your jack isn't making a proper connection with the input, then you're going to have a different sound than if you had a tear in the diaphragm of your speaker cone.
I would recommend taking your exact speaker configuration and then trying them hooked up into someone else' system. If you have the same problem, then you know it is inherent in the speakers. If not or you get a different problem, then it either points to your computer or a problem with the speakers.
Since you have the same problem with two different sets of speakers, I am wondering if it is something specific to your computer / tech setup.
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version