Quote:
|
Originally Posted by iluvgold3
hey bookworm , this might not be a no sound problem but its still a sound problem,. and scince ur the sound queen ur the only one i can ask =P
i have a really discusting problem , my speaker keeps popping everytime i open a game , SPECIALLY world of warcraft :S , i tried everything i could think of , i uninstalled my driver and installed it again and i got the speakers away from the cpu as far as it gets (because it pops like how the game goes if the game freezes there's no popping , if there's alot of ppl there's alot of popping , if i get low fps the popping isnt much :S
plzzzzzzzzz plz plz plz help 
|
I am not a 100% sure of this but have a look
Possible fix for choppy audio
I found this post and used the fix on my ide controller channels and it has evidently corrected the slow performance and choppy audio. I changed the settings a few minutes ago but all choppiness is gone and programs are running faster like it was new. I went into the ide primary and secondary channel and under advanced settings, it showed that both channels were running in pio mode (which I really have no idea about). I uninstalled both channels, rebooted, and after windows automatically reinstalled the channels, they were in ultra dma mode 5 (again, no clue) and all the choppiness is gone. According to the post below, windows downgrades the channel based on errors received. I have seen where some people have the choppiness come back. This is probably because windows is once again downgrading until it is at the slow mode of pio??
I also have a laptop running xp and have the same problem. I can't wait to see if that is the issue. (It is at home)
Hope this helps everyone. I have been ticked off at this issue for darn near a year and this seems to fix it.
Good luck!
Problem solved
Hi again,
for your information, I finally found a solution for my skipping sound problem! The problem turns out to be an automatic 'feature' of Windows XP, as explained on this MS Windows Platform Development Web Site:
-----------
For repeated DMA errors.
Windows XP will turn off DMA mode for a device after encountering certain errors during data transfer operations. If more that six DMA transfer timeouts occur, Windows will turn off DMA and use only PIO mode on that device.
In this case, the user cannot turn on DMA for this device. The only option for the user who wants to enable DMA mode is to uninstall and reinstall the device.
Windows XP downgrades the Ultra DMA transfer mode after receiving more than six CRC errors. Whenever possible, the operating system will step down one UDMA mode at a time (from UDMA mode 4 to UDMA mode 3, and so on).
------------
So I uninstalled the Secondary IDE channel and rebooted. Windows XP reinstalled the IDE drivers and redetected the Cd-rom drives. The drives came back to UDMA Mode 2 with no choppy sound anymore!