![]() ![]() The issue occurs in the following tested senarios: I use Corsair Vengence 1300 analog headphones. While I am on TeamSpeak 3, other players can hear everything through my soundcard. I too am experiencing these sound issues with my Maximus VI Formula board. And it's a software workaround that shouldn't be necessary in the first place.Įspecially because Asus promotes the formula having high quality audio components, I don't understand why this static noice is so present like on a cheap solution and even carries out the sound that I hear to the ppl on voip.Īn echo-cancellation built in the driver would fix it at least. But not every programm has this option obviously (skype, teamspeak doesn't as far as I know). Originally intended for a setup with dedicated speakers and a mic. I was able to work around it with an option in Mumble (voip tool) called echocancellation. Since I tested either front and back panel, 2 headsets, both realtek and microsoft drivers it leads me to some poor input converters on a hardware level. To make things even more strange, when I play music for instance or play a game ppl can hear it, as soon as it is loud enough. In every scenario it carries a noticable static noise that gets of course enhanced by the microphone boost option (a boost of 20db is necessary to even hear my voice loud enough). With the realtek driver AND with the standard microsoft one. If you want a sample of what this sounds like, let me know but it takes about 5 minutes to do so try it, if you don't like realism then uninstall it.Ok from what I tested the "cross-talk" issue appears both when connecting the headset to the front panel AND the back directly to the motherboard. If you want it to sound like its 'breaking up' or far away, then you just adjust the "Destruction" value, all others you probably won't even need to change. The effect will be slightly less noticeable on the whispers, you can adjust these values as you like but I have them quite low (especially the whispers) so that it sounds realistic without interfering with the quality of the communications. Make sure the values are all correct and that the "Home" and "Whisper" boxes are checked. Step 7: Go to the crosstalk radio settings, and set them up like this (Plugins > Crosstalk > RadioFX): Step 6: Enable the Crosstalk plugin (Settings > Plugins > Check the crosstalk box) Step 5: Enable mic clicks & if you have disabled the whisper notify sound, then re-enable that(you will know where that setting is): Step 4: Open Teamspeak and set your sound profile to default (or default male): Step 3: Install the "Crosstalk" plugin you just downloaded, just double click it and it will install. Step 2: Copy all of the files inside the "Realism_by_Harry" folder, into your default soundpack (default male if you use that) folder in the teamspeak directory: WAV files, you can scan it if you don't trust me. The first step is to download both of these, the first link is a sound pack I put together with a couple sounds from different packs, and the second link is a teamspeak 3 plugin called "Crosstalk" The sound pack is made up of just a few. Sample is of a whisper, normal is slightly more distorted(not a lot). For some, the normal VOIP is enough, but for me (and I'm sure others) I want something more realistic on a RP server. So to TL DR, this guide is going to show you how you can get extremely realistic communications on Teamspeak. ![]()
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