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ASUS A7S8X-MX front audio connectorsguide that comes with the case doesn't state the correct colours on the front audio and mic cables. There are four cables (Black, Green, White, Red). This means that I don't know which lead is which. In the manual for the mobo, it states the front audio connector on the board as being set out as follows: mic2 -- AGND MICPWR -- +5VA Line out_R ** BLINE_OUT_R NC - Line out_L ** BLINE_OUT_L The 2 sets of asterisks indicates the jumpers that are on those pins. I have put every combination of cable on the pins "AGND" & "+5VA" but I'm not getting any sound from the front connector on the case. Am I connecting to the wrong pins? Should I remove the jumpers from the Line Out (R&L) pins, or what? Thanks for all assistance in advance. On 11 Feb 2005 09:53:04 -0800, em***@utvinternet.com (Emlyn)
wrote: Show quote >I've got a Tsunami Capricorn case and the above mentioned mobo. The DO NOT put cables on the 5V pin. It is very easy to cause>guide that comes with the case doesn't state the correct colours on >the front audio and mic cables. There are four cables (Black, Green, >White, Red). > >This means that I don't know which lead is which. In the manual for >the mobo, it states the front audio connector on the board as being >set out as follows: > >mic2 -- AGND >MICPWR -- +5VA >Line out_R ** BLINE_OUT_R >NC - >Line out_L ** BLINE_OUT_L > > >The 2 sets of asterisks indicates the jumpers that are on those pins. > >I have put every combination of cable on the pins "AGND" & "+5VA" but >I'm not getting any sound from the front connector on the case. Am I >connecting to the wrong pins? Should I remove the jumpers from the >Line Out (R&L) pins, or what? > >Thanks for all assistance in advance. damage that way. Not being familiar with your case I can't comment on it's wiring and connectors but I am familiar with that audio pinout on your motherboard. You do need to remove the two jumpers to have front panel audio out. Once those jumpers are removed you will not have audio-out at the rear of the motherboard anymore unless your case has audio jacks with normally-closed switches inside the jacks. Some jacks do this but others don't. The black cable is most likely ground. Try putting it there. Play an audio file on your system, looping so you have continuous output. Open up the windows mixer so you have access to the L & R balance slider. Hook your speakers or headphones, etc, up to the front case output jack but don't plug the microphone in yet. So, you're creating an environment in which you'd immediately hear sound if you connected the cable right. Then plug in one of the other wires... try the red one as a random first-start. Plug it into the left or right channel pin where the jumper was, the "line out" pin of that pair. At that point you should have audio on your left or right speaker, but you'd need to use the windows mixer to determine if it's the left or right channel for that color of wire. Repeat this process with the next randomly-chosen color. Since you only have 4 wires, one is ground, one is left-out, one is right-out, and one is mic2. By process of elimination you're wanting to get the output right before plugging in the mic, so system isn't trying to play sound through the mic which is possible but not a good thing to do, could damage a mic. SO with only 4 wires, once you have the left and right channel output working right, which requires 3 wires, you only have the one remaining that could possible go to the mic. Since you only have the 4 wires instead of 6, it isn't possible to have a return that would enable output to rear motherboard jacks too, without electrical modifications which seem beyond your abilities... someone with such abilities would probably have used a multimeter to check continuity on the wires and the jack pins but given the method I described above you shouldn't need to do that. Just don't hook any wires up to the 5V or Mic-pwr, unless you are SURE you have higher-grade equipement that needs a voltage source (typical PC components do not). |
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