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External microphone not working
Hi, I have a XPS 15 (L502x) running Windows 7, but I can't seem to make an external microphone work. The internal mic is working fine, and I have tested the external mic in other machines and it is working fine. What can I do?
Jim Coates
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October 4th, 2012 18:00
I don't know the exact answer, but what I would try is, open the Recording tab of the Sound properties. Make sure the Realtek audio driver is installed because the audio jacks work better with it. If the Realtek driver is installed you will see the words "Realtek High Definition Audio". If it is not installed you will see "High Definition Audio Device".
After the Realtek audio driver is installed, right click on a blank area of the Recording tab and thern select "Show disabled devices" and "show disconnected devices". Look for external mic under those. If there, enable it and set as default.
If the external mic is not there, then go back to the Recording tab and set "Microphone" as the default recording device then look under "Properties" and "Configure" and look there for an external mic setting. Also make sure the mic volume is turned up.
andme123
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October 4th, 2012 19:00
I tried what you suggested, but I seem to lack line in or similar device, only microphone and some kind of mix one:
In microphone, under both configure and properties I could find no specific setting for external microphone. Could a driver update fix this? Can I diagnose it on some other way?
Jim Coates
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October 4th, 2012 19:00
Look for it under both "show disconnected and show disabled devices.
Oh, by the way, the mic jack might not work if you have the laptop setup for 5.1 audio like in the picture here. Try opening the Realtek Audio Manager and check that, then click on the Microphone tab and see what kind of options are there.
Stereo Mix is a recording source that lets you record and capture sounds playing through the laptop, such as streaming audio off the internet. It has other uses too.
Maybe. Try the HD audio driver right off the Realtek site instead of the Dell provided one.
I don't know how you have been testing it so far. The normal way is to open Windows Sound Record and speak into the mic and see whether or not your voice gets recorded. Also, Microsoft has a mic test.
There are also mic tests in Dell Diagnostics audio tests.
Also a mic test in Dell's other tests, but I don't know if they test the external or only the internal mic.
Jim Coates
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October 4th, 2012 20:00
Another thought. When you first get a laptop and open the Sound properties, the default is to see Microphone ande Line In, but to not see Stereo Mix. You do not see that so I suppose someone has made changes to your Sound configuration. There is nothing wrong with that, but if you want to get back to the defaults just do a simple re-installation of the audio driver. Go into the Device Manager, right click and select uninstall, do not select the option to delete the files, and re-boot. Windows will re-build the driver from the files on the hard drive and restore its default configuration.
Jim Coates
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November 13th, 2012 12:00
Did you make sure that it is NOT set up for 5.1 audio as I mentioned above? When set up for surround sound it will output audio through the mic jack.
Other than that, download and install a fresh copy of the audio driver. If that does not fix it then it is a hardware problem -- the impedance sensing circuitry.
hronet
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November 13th, 2012 12:00
Same machine, same problem.
The "jackstick" part of the Dell Audio recognizes that I plug in the microphone jackstick, but it shows up as "speakers", and indeed, I can hear sound-output if I connect headphones.
My guess is that this is a software/driver-issue, but hard to figure out... hoping for a resolution.
hronet
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November 13th, 2012 13:00
Yes, it's definitely set to stereo. I already installed a fresh copy of the dell-drivers. I have also tried with multiple microphones. I'm still hopeful it's just crappy software not recognizing the mic.
hronet
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November 13th, 2012 13:00
(slightly different laptop though: XPS L521X )
Edgelee
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November 15th, 2012 12:00
I have the exact same problem with my XPS L521X, the hybrid mic/headphone jack does not work with an external mic even testing multiple microphones that work on other computers just fine, it is recognised as headphones. After talking to Dell's Tech support, I've used Dell's factory restore, done a fresh OSRI twice once to Win 7 Ult then to Win 7 Home Prem just incase it was a compatibility problem with Win 7 Ult, Each time I reinstalled ALL drivers before testing and I've tried both the latest audio driver from Dell as well as Realtek. Dell replaced the motherboard then even sent me out a USB key to do a Dell restore of the OS again and still no joy with the mic jack. I've searched everywhere on the Internet and there's not much info about this problem out there. I have another date with Dell's Tech support today to see if they can figure it out how to get it working again.
Jim Coates
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November 15th, 2012 14:00
Looks like this thread has shifted from being about the XPS L502x model to the XPS L521x. What applies to one does not necessarily apply to the other. The L502x has a regular headphone jack socket plus another one that doubles as a s/pdif port, plus a regular mic jack.
The L521x has one regular headphone jack plus one combo jack, and no regular mic jack. The combo jack is a smart phone type combo jack. You can use a smart phone headset (combines both headphones and mic into one plug) or conventional headphones in the jack. You can't directly use a regular computer mic because the contacts won't mate. To use a regular mic you need an adapter like the Headset Buddy below. Notice the 4 segmented plug. One segment is the ground. Two of them are the headphones. The tip is the mono mic (no stereo line-in with a combo jack). Somehow it does not surprise me that tech support does not know this stuff.
TonyDuff
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November 23rd, 2012 23:00
I've just bought an inspiron 15z and am faced with the problem that microphone in on the single microphone / headphone jack does not work -- essentially the same as in the original problem on this thread. I can't help but wonder if the problem is the same as what you have just described, that this combination jack actually requires a 4 terminal rj 11 jack as in the picture. Tech support has been useless on this problem, so I'd very much appreciate your reply as to whether that is the case on the Inspiron 15Z 5523 (service tag = Service tag removed per privacy policy>).
Jim Coates
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November 24th, 2012 04:00
Tony, you are correct. The 5523 has a combo port according to its Setup Guide manual. Another clue is the icon molded into the case next to the jack -- it is a headset (headphones plus mic), not headphones.
I have already seen your excellent post on this topic. It is unfortunate that Dell is using this type of jack because it does not support line-in which is an important audio feature for many people. At first I thought they were only going to put them on low end models as a cost saver, but now that they are implementing them more widely I guess I had better make an audio faq. about it.
PS, one of the faqs is about how to insert screen shots into posts on this forum, if you want to enhance your informative post with pictures. I completely agree with you about how useless Dell documentation is regarding audio. I have been doing this forever it seems like and it has always been this way. Dell farms out audio to vendors like IDT and Realtek and seems to have little in-house knowledge or interest in it, so it is up to us owners to create the necessary knowledge base.
hronet
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November 28th, 2012 16:00
jimco - thanks for the response; you are of course correct about it being a combined socket. Dell-support, after being pointed to this topic, also confirmed this to be the case (after a great many emails back and forth).
I share your view that line-in is an important feature - fortunately I have a usb-soundcard I can use, but it's definitely not what I was hoping for when investing in a new laptop.
Thanks again!
plusmore
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December 16th, 2012 14:00
I have an L521x and despite buying one of these cables I cannot get an external mic to work. When I plug it into the headset jack the internal mic stays active and isn't switched off as I would expect. I've tried the latest drivers from Realtek but they make no difference. I'm beginning to think this is some sort of design fault on this model.
hronet
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December 17th, 2012 11:00
I've tested this on L521x, and it did work with a combined headphone/mic input. Only caveat is that the mic-input is mono :(