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Good news, everyone! I have found a rather simple solution from another site.

I
ts not a bug at all. Just mixed up features and i am supprised microsoft tech's
could not solve this hehe
I am surprised you audiophiles were unable to find the reason for the delay! I t
oo began by selecting the "Listen to this device" checkbox in the microphone's p
roperty dialog. I loved the feature and how it adds the microphone to the new Mi
xer, but I was very disappointed at the ~1/5 second audio lag that I was experie
ncing. I plugged in my headphones and tried it again. For reference, I am using
an IBM ThinkPad T42p which uses SoundMax Integrated Digital Audio under the plai
n old AC'97 codec. The very first thing I noticed with the headphones on (aside
from the delay itself) was that my voice sounded a bit more 'rounded off' and so
ftened. This lead me to believe that the delay is being caused by post-processin
g of the incoming audio. Since Windows 7 also has much more advanced integrated
speech recognition features, I would figure that such things as echo cancellatio
n would play a part in it too.
As Chris stated "The "listen to" feature wasn't designed for this scenario.". Wi
th some thought, I figured this to be true; especially considering the text abov
e the checkbox states "You can listen to a portable music player or other device
through this Microphone jack". I unchecked the box and looked elsewhere. Althou
gh the Windows audio stack has been completely rebuilt, it still retains the bas
ic functionality of the old Volume Control from Windows XP; the controls have ju
st been made more modular for further customization possibilities. Here is what
I did:
-Open the Sound dialog through Control Panel or by right clicking the audio tray
icon and clicking "Playback Devices"
-Open the Properties dialog for your Speakers (your device may be different, con
sidering how Windows 7 seems to handle different kinds of hardware)
-Click the Levels tab
-Unmute the microphone
-Apply and close
With the "Listen" option disabled, this solved my problem. No delay and back to
the crisp, direct audio I had before! Hopefully, it will work for everyone else
experiencing this issu
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MHi,
I think found of a solution to our problem. (Maybe it is a workaround but it wor
ks)
I wanted to use my USB wireless microphone just to sing and to hear my own voice
so I searched without luck for days for some sort of a program or driver.
I understand that if microphone is connected through USB to my PC
And My PC is connected through HDMI to receiver which has all the speakers attac
hed,
so no way the analog signal from microphone can go all the way to speakers witho
ut being converted to digital and than back to analogue.
So the only way is to minimize signal conversion delay as much as it is possible
.
Luckily one guy wrote audio repeater program.
http://software.muzychenko.net/eng/vac.html
Here is direct link:
http://software.muzychenko.net/vac410.zip
Simply unzip file, DO NOT INSTALL the application. You are only interested in 1
file. There are 2 folders x64 and x86.
They have identical content (audiorepeater.exe and audiorepeater_ks.exe)
I have Windows 7 64 bit, so I selected x64 of audiorepeater.exe.
There select:
input device - (USB Microphone)
output device - (ATI HDMI output)
local buffer - (50 ms)
priority (realtime)
These settings might differ (depending on how fast is your hardware)
Press start. And ... voil?, you can hear yourself almost without any delay. In m
y case this works fine with karaoke software.
I tried audiorepeater_ks.exe and set all the settings as with audiorepeater.exe
but when I start karaoke software I don't hear music. Only my voice.
If somebody could get this working let me know how. Apparently audiorepeater_ks.
exe is a bit faster as it uses some kernel options (Need to be verified)
Sergey

FINALLY!!! I RESOLVEDMY LATENCY ISSUE!!!!!!!!!!!!!


It's been like 6 months I've been trying to, so I feel like I HAVE TO share with
you guys how I did it... I searched on numerous occasions to find the solution
for the latency issue... It's not the mic, it's not the driver, it's not the so
und card... It's windows 7! I think they did it on purpose so I wouldn't be ab
le to record music that changes peoples mind!!!! ha

Equipment:
HP dv6100 Laptop (running Win 7 Ultimate Edition)
MXL 990 USB Microphone (plugged directly into 2.0 USB port)
Adobe Audition 3.0

SOLUTION:
From Adobe Audition 3.0 Multitrack View, select -Edit then -Audio Hardware Setup

This should be a driver issue. The driver update may not be installed properly.
I suggest that you remove the driver, and then run Windows Update to install it
again.
How to remove.
1. Click Start. In the Start Search box type "devmgmt.msc" and press Enter.
2. Expand "Sound, video and game controllers", double-click on the entry of the
sound card.
3. Click the tab "Driver", click "Uninstall".
4. Click Start. In the Start Search box type "appwiz.cpl" and press Enter.
5. Remove the entries related to the display adapter.
Then, I suggest that you temporary disable the anti-virus, then run Windows Upda
te to install the audio driver.
Also open the recording audio troubleshooter and check if it fixes the problem.
Open the Record Sound troubleshooter by clicking theStart button , and then clic
kingControl Panel. In the search box, typetroubleshooter, and then clickTroubles
hooting. UnderHardware and Sound, clickTroubleshoot audio recording.? If you're
prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or pro
vide confirmation.
Please check this link for information on recording audio troubleshooter:
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/Open-the-Recording-Audio-troubleshoo
ter
Please refer this kb article for fixing sound problems:
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-vista/Tips-for-fixing-common-sound-pr
oblems
Open the Control Panel and find your microphones name in the lower window andmak
e sure it has an X next to it
Now, to the right of your mic's name, on the same line, there are several number
s... Double click on the one in the column labeled -Offset [Samples]
Now enter the value of your latency! That's it!!! WHEW WHOOOO! I hope this hel
ps!!!
To convert the latency value from time into samples just go into Multitrack View
locate the window labeledSelection/View . Enter in the amount of time of the d
elay into theRight of the Selection box& Underneath Begin . Thenright click on
the Time Line , just above theSelection/View window, go toDisplay Time Format an
d selectSamples ... The number will change from time to samples!
Peace - Aaron Greenz

I got a fix here... the ASIO driver


but... it needed a specific configuration to run without delay...

Of course, you'll need a program that supports the use of ASIO driver: in my cas
e Guitar Rig 4 or VSThost(free).
The problem was apparently in sampling rate ! To fix it, I choose this configura
tion on Guitar Rig:http://img687.imageshack.us/img687/5628/clipboard01alq.jpg
and this configuration on ASIO control panel: http://img529.imageshack.us/img529
/1724/asio.jpg
Look at your program if something like those configurations is available.

Just to hear the microphone/raw guitar sound on windows, I need to mute the hear
ing of the mic input on windows mixer, and activate it on my Realtek audio manag
er and do this:http://img197.imageshack.us/img197/637/clipboard02qci.jpg

for those who want to use some karaoke programs, just set the recording device t
o Stereo Mixer after doing the trick of Realtek audio manager
These things are like a sollution to me. I'm running the programs with no delay
(in spite of Guitar rig calculates 20ms delay, but I can't notice that, it's too
small).

The secret is the Sampling Rate... try to set it to something higher than 48000h
z

Hope it help.

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