I posted over on TweakTown in the Asrock forums, but haven't received a reply yet.
My thought is that it is some audio setting that isn't set correctly, but I don't know.
I have a AsRock Ion3D 152D that has an audio problem. Win7 x64, 4GB RAM
When watching streaming video (Hulu, Media Center internet TV, etc) in full screen(or even when the video is ~70% or more of the screen) mode the audio crackles/pops intermittently. If I shrink the video size down, the audio smooths out and plays normally.
When watching a DVD or playing music(CD or MP3) the audio is normal. Ripped movies are OK also.
It acts like a video/audio processing problem and the audio is taking the hit.
Before installing win7 x64 and the 4GB RAM, I had win7 x32 and the factory 2GB RAM-the crackling sound was present at that time also.
Nvidia ION driver 7.17.12.6081(dated 9/20/10)
Nvidia HD Audio Driver 1.1.9.0 (dated 9/7/2010)
I know I can use the analog or optical audio output also, but those are connected to my AV receiver and I don't always want to use full surround sound(especially for TV shows).
Thanks in advance
My thought is that it is some audio setting that isn't set correctly, but I don't know.
I have a AsRock Ion3D 152D that has an audio problem. Win7 x64, 4GB RAM
When watching streaming video (Hulu, Media Center internet TV, etc) in full screen(or even when the video is ~70% or more of the screen) mode the audio crackles/pops intermittently. If I shrink the video size down, the audio smooths out and plays normally.
When watching a DVD or playing music(CD or MP3) the audio is normal. Ripped movies are OK also.
It acts like a video/audio processing problem and the audio is taking the hit.
Before installing win7 x64 and the 4GB RAM, I had win7 x32 and the factory 2GB RAM-the crackling sound was present at that time also.
Nvidia ION driver 7.17.12.6081(dated 9/20/10)
Nvidia HD Audio Driver 1.1.9.0 (dated 9/7/2010)
I know I can use the analog or optical audio output also, but those are connected to my AV receiver and I don't always want to use full surround sound(especially for TV shows).
Thanks in advance
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