After upgrading, the sound quality of Realtek HD Audio has become very bad and extremely low. There is no bass and the sound is distorted and screeching. I have tried updating the Realtek driver but that didn't change anything.
Find the properties for your output device, click on the Dolby tab, then click on the power button to turn it off. You can even do it as you're listening to something to tell the difference. Not sure what effect Dolby was going for, but it makes everything sound like elevator music.
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I had major issues playing games like World of Warcraft, I would alt-tab and the sound goes all jerky and distorted like a broken robot. It was really bad playing Facebook videos or anything while software could be using sound like games or other videos/ads.
I also had very poor sound quality after upgrading my PC to Windows10. Tried to install different Realtek drivers but it didnt work at all. I found a solution after reading many posts on different forums and it had nothing to do with the driver but with power options. The default setting of Power Options is "Balanced", changing it to "High performance" improved immediately the bad sound quality of (Control Panel-Power Options - check High Performance).I hope it will work for many of you as well.
I tried every available driver, including Microsoft HD Audio. For me it was a failing stick of RAM. ECC RAM more precisely. Being ECC it got over the errors, but it introduced caching delays and hence the bad sound. Removed the stick that the (Dell) computer reported in RMT (Reliable Memory Technology) log in BIOS and audio worked so purely afterwards...
Overall sound quality and functionality decreased with each major windows version since XP. If sound could be considered quite of good quality in XP, in Vista and 7 it lost a lot of quality due to the multiple OS layers interfering with the actual sound card functionality. Even good tweakers like SRS lost a lot of possibilities. In the newer 8.X and 10 versions, it's even a worse quality (but not that of a big decrease like from XP to Vista/7). But there are way more functionality problems. Issues like auto-volume reduction are still unfixed practically.Generally, sound is harder to tweak assuming it functions relatively correctly initially. Disabling specific things like Dolby, DTS or EAX may partially make things better. Improvisations like disabling all effects will have bad consequences, like lower volume or even undistinguishable audio. In conclusion, in most cases the OS is at fault directly for the major sound issues that are very hard to track/fix. in some cases, the simple windows troubleshooting system may partially fix some of the issues, but don't count on it.
I had the same problem with my creative sound. I fixed it by going to the devicemanager, right click my soundcard, choose uninstall, then install the proper drivers through the files I downloaded. That fixed my issue.
I Had an issue almost same issue . But actually it was my Dolby option was turned On. Which gave me a bad quality sound. (May be my headset issue).When i turned off that everything worked fine for me.Search for sounds in settings,1. Sounds2. Playback Tab3. Double click on speakers4. Dolby Tab5. off
IF you have a SOUND BLASTER zxr Series sound card. The software.You have to go into the Menu. Un-check the highlighted menus in the picture below.Surround/Crystalizer/Dialog Plus (disable/uncheck)Hopefully Sblaster gets an update.
Right click on speaker icon and select playback devices. Select Speakers then Properties. Select Enhancement tab. Check the box in front of Equalizer which will cause the Sound Effects Properties box to show. Select the box with three dots, this will open a Graphics EQ box with levers for various frequencies. The default setting is None with all of the frequency levers set at zero or in the middle. I increase every lever to the max (upwards) and names the new setting as "Headphones" and saved it. I also have the Loudness Equalization box checked. This seems to have given me the loudest sound for the headphones.
skitchpatterson3's and bekce's answers helped me get started, but I needed to tweak the steps a little bit. I bought an MSI box which had Realtek HD Audio driver. The first thing I needed to do was update the sound driver in Device Settings. After that, I opened Realtek HD Audio Manager and navigated to Sound Effects, which wanted to launch Nahimic 2. The Windows 10 Aniversary update broke Nahimic 2.2, so I needed to download 2.3 from their Facebook page here. The Mega link looks sketchy, but I scanned it with Norton and it looked safe. After updating Nahimic and restarting my computer, my headphone audio was working perfectly.
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