No Sound From Speakers?
You have a sound card and a set of speakers, but for the life of
you, you cannot get them to work. Most of the time, this is
caused by carelessness. Though it sounds idiotic, the first step
is to check the connections. Most people accidentally plug the
speaker jack into the Line-in Jack of the sound card. Check to
see if this is not so in your case. If you have amplified
speakers, make sure that the power is on and mute is not.
The next step is to see where the trouble lies. Many-a-times,
people spend hours trying to fix a system that hasn't broken.
Check to see if the speakers work properly before trying to
troubleshoot your system. Do this by connecting the speakers to
a music system or radio. If they do, the problem is definitely
system related.
The first thing to do now is to check the volume levels in the
system. Check the volume controller in the system tray and also
open the advanced audio controls to make sure that all is
well-nothing is muted or at really love levels Now use several
multimedia applications to play various media files to insure
that the problem is truly system related, and not limited to a
particular application or file. If you find that only a certain
application has the problem, such as Windows Media Player or
Winamp, reinstall it.
If all this is to no avail, go to the system properties
[Windows] + [Pause/Break] or right-click on my computer and
select Properties and in device manager make sure that sound
card is installed properly. Look for a yellow exclamation mark,
if it present, you will have to reinstall the drivers.
If you have an integrated sound card that is disabled in the
BIOS, then Windows will not be able to detect it. Refer to your
motherboard manual, and find out how to enable the same. Usually
it is present under the advanced peripherals section in BIOS.
If you have access to another PC, plug the sound card into that
system, and check if it is working. If the problem persists, off
to a technician you go.