System volume stuck at 0%. Cannot get audio out. aaarrrghh. help me
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@simon123 you hear sound when you plug in headphones from the pi itself?
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@guythp said in System volume stuck at 0%. Cannot get audio out. aaarrrghh. help me:
Forgive my ignorance but is alsamixer in the retropie repository?
It is, as part of the package
alsa-utils
. And I think it comes pre-installed with the official Retropie image. -
@ucald4amarine Yes, with the headphones I do hear the sound. However with the speakers, there is only faint static
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@simon123 make sure you are using the right cable. The 3.5mm jack is a composite AV output jack, not only a stereo-output connector. This means it has four pins carrying audio-L, audio-R, video and ground. A suitable cable is this (notice the 3.5mm plug):
This is the pin assignments of the connector:
Is very rare, but maybe the connector of your speakers is not standard, i.e. using Tip, Ring1 and (Ring2 + Sleeve for ground) ?
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@hhromic Thank you for the quick and detailed answer. However is not this a bit too much? I will def try it and see if it will get the sound going with this type of cable. The PI is connected to a pc monitor with a HDMI to VGA? connector
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@simon123 because the speakers work being connected to a laptop, so it is very strange to me
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@simon123 yes I agree this is unlikely the cause, but I thought it was worth to mention. We don't know much about your setup so is a guessing game too.
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@hhromic there is sound through the HDMI, when I plug into TV. Also when earphones are plugged. No sound with the speakers that otherwise work when plugged into a laptop
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@simon123 not every 3.5mm connector is made exactly the same. Does it insert fully into the RPI? as I said, just a mm misplaced might make the connection wrong. A good test is indeed to try another cable.
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@hhromic I tried with different speakers. I get very low volume on them and only when volume is set at max on them. However the System volume is still stuck at 0%. I am not sure how I get the sound...
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@simon123 I noticed two things, (1) you are using USB-powered speakers and (2) you didn't seem to have test the suggesitons about using
alsamixer
.
So I have some suggestions for you to try:- Are you connecting these speakers to the RPI itself using a USB port? This might be problematic because the RPI is known to not deliver much power through the USB ports, and I suspects speakers are power hungry. Can you try to power the speakers with a laptop or other source via USB but the audio from the RPI?
- Can you go to a console and type the following command to set the volume using alsa:
amixer sset PCM 90% unmute
. This sets the volume reasonable high so be careful with the noise.
After point 2 you should see something like this (volume set to 90%):
Simple mixer control 'PCM',0 Capabilities: pvolume pvolume-joined pswitch pswitch-joined Playback channels: Mono Limits: Playback -10239 - 400 Mono: Playback -663 [90%] [-6.63dB] [on]
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