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Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

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  • lti
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Now that there have been no replies for three weeks, I'll add a little update.

    I compared the sound on this laptop to my desktop computer, and they both sound the same. Switching to the generic Microsoft driver did make a big difference, but I thought it was worse since I was used to the sound with the real Conexant driver. The real driver is 59.4MB, and most of that is just the software that provides the crappy enhancements and two useless equalizers (one might be usable, but disabling the normal Windows enhancements disables it as well). The only reason to install it again would be if it allowed me to reconfigure the jacks as a line out and line in. The chip (CX2058x series) supports that, but the microphone jack is mono only (the tip and ring contacts appear to both be connected to the left channel input) and the driver has no configuration settings.

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  • shovenose
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Yeah, this laptop is super cheap, add another 2GB RAM and it's an inexpensive usable machine.
    http://www.bestbuy.com/site/dell-ins...specifications

    I'm actually considering purchasing this for my mom. If they still have it in June she'll get it for her birthday.
    It's not beautiful nor does it have a good screen, but it's probably a decent enough machine.
    Last edited by shovenose; 12-29-2013, 12:13 AM.

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  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    It's usually best to do a little bit of search online to see some new laptops and see what price range you like and what features you'd like to have, then go to an actual store that has the laptops you "liked" displayed and try them out. See how much heat they kick out, how they feel, and give them a good test if possible.

    When I was buying a laptop for someone a few years back, first thing I did was look at some laptops online. Then I went to the store (Micro Center) with a flash drive full of diagnostic utilities and started playing the same 1080p YouTube HD video on each laptop, then checked how hot each laptop ran and how loud it was. Ended up picking up a Compaq CQ-61, despite knowing that low-end HP/Compaq aren't exactly stellar. It's a 15.4" sub-$500 laptop ($430, to be exact, I believe), so definitely in the consumer end of the scale, though not the cheapest stuff which were $200-300 and came with single-core Celerons and similar at the time. I picked it mostly based on the price and the fact that it had probably the most powerful CPU for its price range, yet the CPU had only moderate TDP rating. It was either an AMD Athlon dual-core M340 or P340. Laptop fans were always on but very quiet and there was no heat when laptop was idle. After HD video test, the CPU temperature were fairly low (mid 40's) and CPU fan was spinning faster, but still not too loudly and there was hadly much heat coming from the exhaust grill.
    That laptop is still working today even with lots of daily use and many power cycles.
    Last edited by momaka; 12-28-2013, 10:57 PM.

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  • Th3_uN1Qu3
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Oh yeah i've forgot about Dell. On the bulky side nowadays, but still good machines.

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  • shovenose
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    I would get a higher end Lenovo or Asus.
    Toshiba, HP, Acer, Gateway, and eMachines are trash.
    Dell and Samsung are alright.

    Leave a comment:


  • Th3_uN1Qu3
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    My main computer crashes every now and then, but it's a heavily overclocked system that hasn't been upgraded in almost 5 years, so that's to be expected.

    My laptop computer does not crash at all, and it's a piece of junk brought back from the dead (been dropped by its original owner). It's an Acer 5742G with ATi dedicated graphics. Had it for (IIRC) 8 months now with no complaints. Okay, i have to thank the previous owner for replacing the screen with a matte one after he smashed it, but 1366x768 LED screens can be had for fairly cheap. I think this one is from a HP laptop.

    Yes, it's flimsy. The Lenovo i traded for this Acer was miles ahead in terms of build quality, but a bit behind in performance. Yes, it's only got a single built-in speaker.
    But other than that, it's a good laptop and its performance never let me down so far. Good CPU, good battery, decent graphics, good audio. Much better than the Lenovo which had a ground loop on the audio amp most likely, there was some switching noise in the background. On the Acer it's zero, it's got absolutely no background noise when using a grounded power adapter in a grounded outlet. Good performance on both headphones and line out. The built-in mic is kinda crap, but good enough for skype. Good performance on external mic/line-in too. It's got a Realtek sound chip btw.

    And yet i don't recommend Acer/Emachines/Packard Bell, but still, they've moved up a lot in quality since the last years. Toshiba OTOH, is known for playing dirty tricks lately, including messing around with the BIOS to prevent CPU upgrades. I'd look for, in this order: Lenovo, Asus, Acer. As in, if all else fails, get an Acer. It's gonna play nice with you if you take care of it.
    Last edited by Th3_uN1Qu3; 12-28-2013, 10:36 PM.

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  • lti
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    I tried to research and get a good one. All I could find was that Toshiba laptops were good and the Intel Core processors were faster than anything else. I couldn't find anything about the quality of the hardware, but I didn't look very hard because I didn't know that it was possible to make such a bad keyboard and display.

    I think I have an average consumer-grade laptop from that time period. The only way to get a usable screen resolution at the time was to get a 17" screen, and all of them would have had zero contrast and too much blue. Nobody can tell what brand of hard drive it is going to use until they buy it and look in Device Manager. You can't tell that a certain model of computer is going to have serious hardware failures after a few months when that model hasn't existed for that long or people think computers are supposed to crash that often.

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  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Originally posted by Th3_uN1Qu3 View Post
    Do some research before buying and you'll definitely find something that will suit you.
    Agreed.
    There are actually some decent consumer-level laptops out there that aren't trash, even from some of the cheaper Compaq/HP models.

    Leave a comment:


  • Th3_uN1Qu3
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Originally posted by lti View Post
    I'm afraid that a new computer will have similar issues
    Then you'll be stuck with this pile of trash forever. Do some research before buying and you'll definitely find something that will suit you.

    Leave a comment:


  • lti
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    I don't know why I said the touchpad is completely useless. I can use it if I turn the pointer speed all the way up, but scrolling is a pain and the software is buggy. I am sometimes unable to scroll in Firefox.

    I'm afraid that a new computer will have similar issues, and I don't have that kind of money right now. I would get a better keyboard and hard drive and a display with a usable screen resolution if I get a business-class laptop. The only way I could have had a better computer at the time I bought this one is if I got a Dell, Asus, or Lenovo instead. I might have ended up with a better keyboard, better quality hardware, and USB 3.0.

    If I do get rid of it, my parents would probably take it. They're always telling me that they want a newer computer and they wouldn't have a problem with this one.

    If this computer had good quality sound, the amplifier would be easy, and it would be useful for lots of portable devices with volume limited headphone outputs. The hardest part would be the power supply if you wanted it to be powered by the computer.

    Strangely, this laptop's built-in speakers are quieter than anything else.

    Leave a comment:


  • Th3_uN1Qu3
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    In that case, i'd clean the laptop real well and ebay it. Then just buy something else.

    Leave a comment:


  • lti
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    I don't have the money to keep buying external hardware to fix this laptop's flaws. It's a money pit that's turning into a desktop computer. I've already had to pay $50 in shipping back to Toshiba for repairs, $30 for a crappy wireless mouse (the battery only lasts two months and it has the loudest buttons I've ever heard in anything) because that really good Synaptics touchpad is unusable and my old USB mouse doesn't work due to some software issue, and about $40 to repair a monitor so I have a decent display to use. I might need new RAM and a new hard drive shortly. The keyboard sucks, so I might end up getting one of those USB to PS/2 converters so I can use the keyboard I have collecting dust and my good mouse (it supports USB and PS/2). If I do get a USB sound device, it will have to be cheap.

    In the price range I'm looking at, most of those devices use C-Media chips. I would like to have a line-in jack and Linux support, even though I'm currently only using Windows. I don't see any with both of those features.
    Last edited by lti; 12-27-2013, 01:01 PM.

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  • Th3_uN1Qu3
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Had no issues with Conexant audio, but my last experience with it was with a chip made in 2007 (Conexant SmartAudio 220 aka Hermosa).

    If you buy a USB soundcard, please get something decent like a Creative, or at least something with a C-Media chip in it. Otherwise your next rant will be about the USB sound device you just bought...

    Leave a comment:


  • lti
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    The sound isn't good enough to amplify anyway. It sounded pretty bad before I started, and it sounds even worse with the generic Microsoft audio driver. It puts emphasis on certain frequencies so some instruments are louder than they should be. Someone probably decided that they need to make "HD" audio sound different so people will hear this huge difference and think it must be better because it's "HD."

    Every computer I have sounds the same except for the two with Conexant audio chips. That second computer has really badly distorted sound and makes high frequencies loud enough to cause pain while the rest of the audio range is barely audible, but that could be the fault of the amplifier for the headphone output.

    I guess I need a USB audio device now.
    Last edited by lti; 12-25-2013, 11:23 AM.

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  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Originally posted by joshnz View Post
    You should be able to amplfy it quite allot without to much noise
    +1

    I've built a simple 5-transistor SE class A mono amplifier before with a gain of slightly over 10 V/V (20 dB). Tried powering some decent size 3-way 8-Ohm speakers. There was no audible hiss or hum noise from the amp at all.

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  • joshnz
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    You should be able to amplfy it quite allot without to much noise

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  • joshnz
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    It's not just laptops that limit volume phones do it to.
    On some laptops you could plug into line out to get more volume.

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  • lti
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Originally posted by joshnz View Post
    Sounds like your fighting a loosing battle.
    I'm not to sure what can be done.
    No, there is nothing I can do. Changing the driver was the only thing that had a chance of fixing this. If anyone wants a line-level output from their laptop, they will need a USB audio device.

    The output voltage from the headphone jack is only 0.235V and drops to 0.193V with a 33 ohm load. That limits the output power to 1mW, which is good for cheap headphones. I wonder how much background noise I would get if I amplify this signal until I get a line-level output.

    The audio hardware on this computer is made for idiots. They have to have the volume limit so kids won't hurt their precious little ears, and the same kids don't see any reason to connect real speakers when the computer already has built-in speakers. If they do connect speakers, they use one of those "portable" things that doesn't sound any better than the speakers in the laptop. Protecting idiots from themselves is also the reason why the VGA port doesn't have the retention screw holes anymore. Nobody with a brain would leave a VGA cable hanging where someone could trip over it and break the computer. Now the VGA cable falls out if you breathe on it.

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  • joshnz
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    Sounds like your fighting a loosing battle.
    I'm not to sure what can be done.

    Leave a comment:


  • lti
    replied
    Re: Disabling Conexant SmartAudio headphone limiter

    I'm using the generic Windows driver now. It might be slightly louder, but not enough to make external speakers usable. It might also sound worse, but it's hard to tell without a direct comparison between the two. I think the generic driver has its own limiter or the limit is in hardware.

    I can make an amplifier with a gain of 8.5 to get a line-level output, but that will amplify background noise and make the sound quality even worse. I could also get a USB audio device, but any within my price range kind of suck. I would also need a USB hub.

    Leave a comment:

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