Windows not remembering default audio device?
I prefer the audio output on my computer to use the standard audio jack output due to volume issues. But I am using a monitor with HDMI. I have chosen to set the default audio device to be "Speakers"
But every time I reboot the default audio device is the HDMI Output again.
I am running Windows 7 64bit. Why does it not remember the default device? (I do shutdown and boot up properly without errors.)
windows-7 audio hdmi
add a comment |
I prefer the audio output on my computer to use the standard audio jack output due to volume issues. But I am using a monitor with HDMI. I have chosen to set the default audio device to be "Speakers"
But every time I reboot the default audio device is the HDMI Output again.
I am running Windows 7 64bit. Why does it not remember the default device? (I do shutdown and boot up properly without errors.)
windows-7 audio hdmi
add a comment |
I prefer the audio output on my computer to use the standard audio jack output due to volume issues. But I am using a monitor with HDMI. I have chosen to set the default audio device to be "Speakers"
But every time I reboot the default audio device is the HDMI Output again.
I am running Windows 7 64bit. Why does it not remember the default device? (I do shutdown and boot up properly without errors.)
windows-7 audio hdmi
I prefer the audio output on my computer to use the standard audio jack output due to volume issues. But I am using a monitor with HDMI. I have chosen to set the default audio device to be "Speakers"
But every time I reboot the default audio device is the HDMI Output again.
I am running Windows 7 64bit. Why does it not remember the default device? (I do shutdown and boot up properly without errors.)
windows-7 audio hdmi
windows-7 audio hdmi
edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:17
Community♦
1
1
asked Aug 7 '12 at 16:10
L84L84
1,936164779
1,936164779
add a comment |
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
The Quick and Easy Way Out
One way to go about this is to disable the HDMI audio device in the Device Manager. This won't let you use your HDMI audio unless you enable it again, so you'll have to remember how to do that; but the upside is that you won't even see the HDMI audio device in the playback/recording properties in the control panel.
But I Want It To Work Right!
The reason this is happening is likely because the VIA sound driver has a bug that causes it not to perform "jack detection" correctly.
Jack detection is a mechanism which detects whether you have a sound device plugged into your sound jack. It is a fairly new technology based on sensing whether an electrical current is being drawn from the audio port (a very small amount of energy is needed to transmit the audio over a standard 3.5" cable).
When jack detection is working correctly on Windows 7, Windows will automatically keep using a device marked as default as long as an audio output (speakers, headphones, etc) is plugged into the device. But if some other device has a connected jack and the default device doesn't, it will switch to the device that is connected. It does this to prevent people from having to manually dig around in the control panel to listen to audio: it helps new users because the audio "just plays" out of whichever device the jack is plugged into.
Jack detection is actually a software mechanism that is easily broken and very hardware-specific. On the Linux operating system, the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) driver developers have struggled with jack detection for years, having the labor-intensive task of making it work on tons of different sound cards. Unfortunately, most motherboards ship a unique or nearly-unique audio chipset, making the problem worse. This also means that Windows drivers are equally error-prone.
Bad Driver Developers Vs. The Public
Suggestions that may enable proper jack detection without having to disable the device in the device manager:
- Update your audio drivers from your motherboard manufacturer's website.
- Update your AMD Catalyst drivers to the latest.
The reason that the system always thinks your HDMI audio is "plugged in" is likely that you use HDMI or DisplayPort to plug in your monitor. Windows says "oh, you have a monitor plugged in", and the electrical signaling with the monitor indicates that an audio path is available, so of course it tries to use that as the default device -- especially if your VIA audio driver doesn't have proper jack detection and Windows thinks nothing is plugged in.
Here's a real quick jack detection test:
- Start up the Windows control panel to the page where you took the screenshot in your question.
- Plug in your 3.5mm speakers/headphones plug into the motherboard's sound chipset (the VIA).
- Unplug it.
If nothing in the UI changes to say "Device unplugged" or "Not plugged in", then jack detection is not functioning properly.
If you can definitively determine that jack detection is working properly, and you still can't get this to work as you desire, you may have to resort to disabling the device in the device manager. :/
Compliment Thy Querant
BTW, hi! :) You have an awesome avatar, hehe :)
Thanks for the complement and the detailed answer! I went the disable the Easy Way Out for now. I have the latest Catalyst drivers and will check the audio drivers to see if they can be updated.
– L84
Aug 7 '12 at 20:19
This does not work. Windows 10 continuously falls back to a HDMI audio device after any updates are performed. Out of curiosity I have tried a different video card, GTX1080 and an older ATI Radeon card and both have yield the same result.
– loan.burger
Aug 18 '17 at 21:41
add a comment |
In windows 10, I use headphones that are connected via optical, and recently the computer has decided at random to just switch to the monitor built ins for no apparent reason in the middle of youtube videos and games. Looking at the responses here, I tried looking into the device manager. The audio inputs and outputs area looked to just mirror the available things on the playback devices, but under "sound, video and game controllers" was an "Nvidia high definition audio" which I disabled and bam! no more monitor speakers showing up in the playback devices. Now to see how long this one works.
add a comment |
You should not have to disable anything on your computer that you are not using. What i did was go into programs and features and delete the audio driver for your video card and also delete the 3d vision driver as they are never used(mine was nvidia). The only driver you need is your GRAPHICS driver for your video card as the rest is overkill. Start off by deleting everything off your computer that you don't need then you will have a better understanding of what the problem is.Also to note is in your sound window, when you change back to your default which in my case was "speakers" you need to configure it before you exit and make sure left and right chanel is selected BEFORE you exit.
add a comment |
Update on this for Windows 8 (if anyone else comes across this):
ASUS Vivobook S400AC running Windows 8 fully updated -
Using a dell 23 inch monitor via HDMI, disabling the HDMI Audio from Device Manager did not solve my issue. Second I unplug and replug, or restart (either hibernate or full shutdown / reboot) the issue returns where is resets to the HDMI. If you right click the sound icon in bottom right of taskbar (by clock) and choose "playback devices" you can then right click the HDMI deice listed and choose disable from there.
Dong this removed the device from that menu and solved my problem.
No idea why it wouldn't take from device manager.
add a comment |
In my case I wanted the HDMI audio.
Navigate to system devices in the device manager.
You'll get two HD audio controllers.
Enable the one you want and disable the other.
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "3"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f458714%2fwindows-not-remembering-default-audio-device%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The Quick and Easy Way Out
One way to go about this is to disable the HDMI audio device in the Device Manager. This won't let you use your HDMI audio unless you enable it again, so you'll have to remember how to do that; but the upside is that you won't even see the HDMI audio device in the playback/recording properties in the control panel.
But I Want It To Work Right!
The reason this is happening is likely because the VIA sound driver has a bug that causes it not to perform "jack detection" correctly.
Jack detection is a mechanism which detects whether you have a sound device plugged into your sound jack. It is a fairly new technology based on sensing whether an electrical current is being drawn from the audio port (a very small amount of energy is needed to transmit the audio over a standard 3.5" cable).
When jack detection is working correctly on Windows 7, Windows will automatically keep using a device marked as default as long as an audio output (speakers, headphones, etc) is plugged into the device. But if some other device has a connected jack and the default device doesn't, it will switch to the device that is connected. It does this to prevent people from having to manually dig around in the control panel to listen to audio: it helps new users because the audio "just plays" out of whichever device the jack is plugged into.
Jack detection is actually a software mechanism that is easily broken and very hardware-specific. On the Linux operating system, the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) driver developers have struggled with jack detection for years, having the labor-intensive task of making it work on tons of different sound cards. Unfortunately, most motherboards ship a unique or nearly-unique audio chipset, making the problem worse. This also means that Windows drivers are equally error-prone.
Bad Driver Developers Vs. The Public
Suggestions that may enable proper jack detection without having to disable the device in the device manager:
- Update your audio drivers from your motherboard manufacturer's website.
- Update your AMD Catalyst drivers to the latest.
The reason that the system always thinks your HDMI audio is "plugged in" is likely that you use HDMI or DisplayPort to plug in your monitor. Windows says "oh, you have a monitor plugged in", and the electrical signaling with the monitor indicates that an audio path is available, so of course it tries to use that as the default device -- especially if your VIA audio driver doesn't have proper jack detection and Windows thinks nothing is plugged in.
Here's a real quick jack detection test:
- Start up the Windows control panel to the page where you took the screenshot in your question.
- Plug in your 3.5mm speakers/headphones plug into the motherboard's sound chipset (the VIA).
- Unplug it.
If nothing in the UI changes to say "Device unplugged" or "Not plugged in", then jack detection is not functioning properly.
If you can definitively determine that jack detection is working properly, and you still can't get this to work as you desire, you may have to resort to disabling the device in the device manager. :/
Compliment Thy Querant
BTW, hi! :) You have an awesome avatar, hehe :)
Thanks for the complement and the detailed answer! I went the disable the Easy Way Out for now. I have the latest Catalyst drivers and will check the audio drivers to see if they can be updated.
– L84
Aug 7 '12 at 20:19
This does not work. Windows 10 continuously falls back to a HDMI audio device after any updates are performed. Out of curiosity I have tried a different video card, GTX1080 and an older ATI Radeon card and both have yield the same result.
– loan.burger
Aug 18 '17 at 21:41
add a comment |
The Quick and Easy Way Out
One way to go about this is to disable the HDMI audio device in the Device Manager. This won't let you use your HDMI audio unless you enable it again, so you'll have to remember how to do that; but the upside is that you won't even see the HDMI audio device in the playback/recording properties in the control panel.
But I Want It To Work Right!
The reason this is happening is likely because the VIA sound driver has a bug that causes it not to perform "jack detection" correctly.
Jack detection is a mechanism which detects whether you have a sound device plugged into your sound jack. It is a fairly new technology based on sensing whether an electrical current is being drawn from the audio port (a very small amount of energy is needed to transmit the audio over a standard 3.5" cable).
When jack detection is working correctly on Windows 7, Windows will automatically keep using a device marked as default as long as an audio output (speakers, headphones, etc) is plugged into the device. But if some other device has a connected jack and the default device doesn't, it will switch to the device that is connected. It does this to prevent people from having to manually dig around in the control panel to listen to audio: it helps new users because the audio "just plays" out of whichever device the jack is plugged into.
Jack detection is actually a software mechanism that is easily broken and very hardware-specific. On the Linux operating system, the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) driver developers have struggled with jack detection for years, having the labor-intensive task of making it work on tons of different sound cards. Unfortunately, most motherboards ship a unique or nearly-unique audio chipset, making the problem worse. This also means that Windows drivers are equally error-prone.
Bad Driver Developers Vs. The Public
Suggestions that may enable proper jack detection without having to disable the device in the device manager:
- Update your audio drivers from your motherboard manufacturer's website.
- Update your AMD Catalyst drivers to the latest.
The reason that the system always thinks your HDMI audio is "plugged in" is likely that you use HDMI or DisplayPort to plug in your monitor. Windows says "oh, you have a monitor plugged in", and the electrical signaling with the monitor indicates that an audio path is available, so of course it tries to use that as the default device -- especially if your VIA audio driver doesn't have proper jack detection and Windows thinks nothing is plugged in.
Here's a real quick jack detection test:
- Start up the Windows control panel to the page where you took the screenshot in your question.
- Plug in your 3.5mm speakers/headphones plug into the motherboard's sound chipset (the VIA).
- Unplug it.
If nothing in the UI changes to say "Device unplugged" or "Not plugged in", then jack detection is not functioning properly.
If you can definitively determine that jack detection is working properly, and you still can't get this to work as you desire, you may have to resort to disabling the device in the device manager. :/
Compliment Thy Querant
BTW, hi! :) You have an awesome avatar, hehe :)
Thanks for the complement and the detailed answer! I went the disable the Easy Way Out for now. I have the latest Catalyst drivers and will check the audio drivers to see if they can be updated.
– L84
Aug 7 '12 at 20:19
This does not work. Windows 10 continuously falls back to a HDMI audio device after any updates are performed. Out of curiosity I have tried a different video card, GTX1080 and an older ATI Radeon card and both have yield the same result.
– loan.burger
Aug 18 '17 at 21:41
add a comment |
The Quick and Easy Way Out
One way to go about this is to disable the HDMI audio device in the Device Manager. This won't let you use your HDMI audio unless you enable it again, so you'll have to remember how to do that; but the upside is that you won't even see the HDMI audio device in the playback/recording properties in the control panel.
But I Want It To Work Right!
The reason this is happening is likely because the VIA sound driver has a bug that causes it not to perform "jack detection" correctly.
Jack detection is a mechanism which detects whether you have a sound device plugged into your sound jack. It is a fairly new technology based on sensing whether an electrical current is being drawn from the audio port (a very small amount of energy is needed to transmit the audio over a standard 3.5" cable).
When jack detection is working correctly on Windows 7, Windows will automatically keep using a device marked as default as long as an audio output (speakers, headphones, etc) is plugged into the device. But if some other device has a connected jack and the default device doesn't, it will switch to the device that is connected. It does this to prevent people from having to manually dig around in the control panel to listen to audio: it helps new users because the audio "just plays" out of whichever device the jack is plugged into.
Jack detection is actually a software mechanism that is easily broken and very hardware-specific. On the Linux operating system, the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) driver developers have struggled with jack detection for years, having the labor-intensive task of making it work on tons of different sound cards. Unfortunately, most motherboards ship a unique or nearly-unique audio chipset, making the problem worse. This also means that Windows drivers are equally error-prone.
Bad Driver Developers Vs. The Public
Suggestions that may enable proper jack detection without having to disable the device in the device manager:
- Update your audio drivers from your motherboard manufacturer's website.
- Update your AMD Catalyst drivers to the latest.
The reason that the system always thinks your HDMI audio is "plugged in" is likely that you use HDMI or DisplayPort to plug in your monitor. Windows says "oh, you have a monitor plugged in", and the electrical signaling with the monitor indicates that an audio path is available, so of course it tries to use that as the default device -- especially if your VIA audio driver doesn't have proper jack detection and Windows thinks nothing is plugged in.
Here's a real quick jack detection test:
- Start up the Windows control panel to the page where you took the screenshot in your question.
- Plug in your 3.5mm speakers/headphones plug into the motherboard's sound chipset (the VIA).
- Unplug it.
If nothing in the UI changes to say "Device unplugged" or "Not plugged in", then jack detection is not functioning properly.
If you can definitively determine that jack detection is working properly, and you still can't get this to work as you desire, you may have to resort to disabling the device in the device manager. :/
Compliment Thy Querant
BTW, hi! :) You have an awesome avatar, hehe :)
The Quick and Easy Way Out
One way to go about this is to disable the HDMI audio device in the Device Manager. This won't let you use your HDMI audio unless you enable it again, so you'll have to remember how to do that; but the upside is that you won't even see the HDMI audio device in the playback/recording properties in the control panel.
But I Want It To Work Right!
The reason this is happening is likely because the VIA sound driver has a bug that causes it not to perform "jack detection" correctly.
Jack detection is a mechanism which detects whether you have a sound device plugged into your sound jack. It is a fairly new technology based on sensing whether an electrical current is being drawn from the audio port (a very small amount of energy is needed to transmit the audio over a standard 3.5" cable).
When jack detection is working correctly on Windows 7, Windows will automatically keep using a device marked as default as long as an audio output (speakers, headphones, etc) is plugged into the device. But if some other device has a connected jack and the default device doesn't, it will switch to the device that is connected. It does this to prevent people from having to manually dig around in the control panel to listen to audio: it helps new users because the audio "just plays" out of whichever device the jack is plugged into.
Jack detection is actually a software mechanism that is easily broken and very hardware-specific. On the Linux operating system, the Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) driver developers have struggled with jack detection for years, having the labor-intensive task of making it work on tons of different sound cards. Unfortunately, most motherboards ship a unique or nearly-unique audio chipset, making the problem worse. This also means that Windows drivers are equally error-prone.
Bad Driver Developers Vs. The Public
Suggestions that may enable proper jack detection without having to disable the device in the device manager:
- Update your audio drivers from your motherboard manufacturer's website.
- Update your AMD Catalyst drivers to the latest.
The reason that the system always thinks your HDMI audio is "plugged in" is likely that you use HDMI or DisplayPort to plug in your monitor. Windows says "oh, you have a monitor plugged in", and the electrical signaling with the monitor indicates that an audio path is available, so of course it tries to use that as the default device -- especially if your VIA audio driver doesn't have proper jack detection and Windows thinks nothing is plugged in.
Here's a real quick jack detection test:
- Start up the Windows control panel to the page where you took the screenshot in your question.
- Plug in your 3.5mm speakers/headphones plug into the motherboard's sound chipset (the VIA).
- Unplug it.
If nothing in the UI changes to say "Device unplugged" or "Not plugged in", then jack detection is not functioning properly.
If you can definitively determine that jack detection is working properly, and you still can't get this to work as you desire, you may have to resort to disabling the device in the device manager. :/
Compliment Thy Querant
BTW, hi! :) You have an awesome avatar, hehe :)
edited Aug 7 '12 at 19:14
answered Aug 7 '12 at 17:57
allquixoticallquixotic
30.7k695127
30.7k695127
Thanks for the complement and the detailed answer! I went the disable the Easy Way Out for now. I have the latest Catalyst drivers and will check the audio drivers to see if they can be updated.
– L84
Aug 7 '12 at 20:19
This does not work. Windows 10 continuously falls back to a HDMI audio device after any updates are performed. Out of curiosity I have tried a different video card, GTX1080 and an older ATI Radeon card and both have yield the same result.
– loan.burger
Aug 18 '17 at 21:41
add a comment |
Thanks for the complement and the detailed answer! I went the disable the Easy Way Out for now. I have the latest Catalyst drivers and will check the audio drivers to see if they can be updated.
– L84
Aug 7 '12 at 20:19
This does not work. Windows 10 continuously falls back to a HDMI audio device after any updates are performed. Out of curiosity I have tried a different video card, GTX1080 and an older ATI Radeon card and both have yield the same result.
– loan.burger
Aug 18 '17 at 21:41
Thanks for the complement and the detailed answer! I went the disable the Easy Way Out for now. I have the latest Catalyst drivers and will check the audio drivers to see if they can be updated.
– L84
Aug 7 '12 at 20:19
Thanks for the complement and the detailed answer! I went the disable the Easy Way Out for now. I have the latest Catalyst drivers and will check the audio drivers to see if they can be updated.
– L84
Aug 7 '12 at 20:19
This does not work. Windows 10 continuously falls back to a HDMI audio device after any updates are performed. Out of curiosity I have tried a different video card, GTX1080 and an older ATI Radeon card and both have yield the same result.
– loan.burger
Aug 18 '17 at 21:41
This does not work. Windows 10 continuously falls back to a HDMI audio device after any updates are performed. Out of curiosity I have tried a different video card, GTX1080 and an older ATI Radeon card and both have yield the same result.
– loan.burger
Aug 18 '17 at 21:41
add a comment |
In windows 10, I use headphones that are connected via optical, and recently the computer has decided at random to just switch to the monitor built ins for no apparent reason in the middle of youtube videos and games. Looking at the responses here, I tried looking into the device manager. The audio inputs and outputs area looked to just mirror the available things on the playback devices, but under "sound, video and game controllers" was an "Nvidia high definition audio" which I disabled and bam! no more monitor speakers showing up in the playback devices. Now to see how long this one works.
add a comment |
In windows 10, I use headphones that are connected via optical, and recently the computer has decided at random to just switch to the monitor built ins for no apparent reason in the middle of youtube videos and games. Looking at the responses here, I tried looking into the device manager. The audio inputs and outputs area looked to just mirror the available things on the playback devices, but under "sound, video and game controllers" was an "Nvidia high definition audio" which I disabled and bam! no more monitor speakers showing up in the playback devices. Now to see how long this one works.
add a comment |
In windows 10, I use headphones that are connected via optical, and recently the computer has decided at random to just switch to the monitor built ins for no apparent reason in the middle of youtube videos and games. Looking at the responses here, I tried looking into the device manager. The audio inputs and outputs area looked to just mirror the available things on the playback devices, but under "sound, video and game controllers" was an "Nvidia high definition audio" which I disabled and bam! no more monitor speakers showing up in the playback devices. Now to see how long this one works.
In windows 10, I use headphones that are connected via optical, and recently the computer has decided at random to just switch to the monitor built ins for no apparent reason in the middle of youtube videos and games. Looking at the responses here, I tried looking into the device manager. The audio inputs and outputs area looked to just mirror the available things on the playback devices, but under "sound, video and game controllers" was an "Nvidia high definition audio" which I disabled and bam! no more monitor speakers showing up in the playback devices. Now to see how long this one works.
answered Nov 18 '17 at 22:55
Daniel EddyDaniel Eddy
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
You should not have to disable anything on your computer that you are not using. What i did was go into programs and features and delete the audio driver for your video card and also delete the 3d vision driver as they are never used(mine was nvidia). The only driver you need is your GRAPHICS driver for your video card as the rest is overkill. Start off by deleting everything off your computer that you don't need then you will have a better understanding of what the problem is.Also to note is in your sound window, when you change back to your default which in my case was "speakers" you need to configure it before you exit and make sure left and right chanel is selected BEFORE you exit.
add a comment |
You should not have to disable anything on your computer that you are not using. What i did was go into programs and features and delete the audio driver for your video card and also delete the 3d vision driver as they are never used(mine was nvidia). The only driver you need is your GRAPHICS driver for your video card as the rest is overkill. Start off by deleting everything off your computer that you don't need then you will have a better understanding of what the problem is.Also to note is in your sound window, when you change back to your default which in my case was "speakers" you need to configure it before you exit and make sure left and right chanel is selected BEFORE you exit.
add a comment |
You should not have to disable anything on your computer that you are not using. What i did was go into programs and features and delete the audio driver for your video card and also delete the 3d vision driver as they are never used(mine was nvidia). The only driver you need is your GRAPHICS driver for your video card as the rest is overkill. Start off by deleting everything off your computer that you don't need then you will have a better understanding of what the problem is.Also to note is in your sound window, when you change back to your default which in my case was "speakers" you need to configure it before you exit and make sure left and right chanel is selected BEFORE you exit.
You should not have to disable anything on your computer that you are not using. What i did was go into programs and features and delete the audio driver for your video card and also delete the 3d vision driver as they are never used(mine was nvidia). The only driver you need is your GRAPHICS driver for your video card as the rest is overkill. Start off by deleting everything off your computer that you don't need then you will have a better understanding of what the problem is.Also to note is in your sound window, when you change back to your default which in my case was "speakers" you need to configure it before you exit and make sure left and right chanel is selected BEFORE you exit.
edited Jan 25 at 23:47
answered Jan 25 at 23:37
alanalan
112
112
add a comment |
add a comment |
Update on this for Windows 8 (if anyone else comes across this):
ASUS Vivobook S400AC running Windows 8 fully updated -
Using a dell 23 inch monitor via HDMI, disabling the HDMI Audio from Device Manager did not solve my issue. Second I unplug and replug, or restart (either hibernate or full shutdown / reboot) the issue returns where is resets to the HDMI. If you right click the sound icon in bottom right of taskbar (by clock) and choose "playback devices" you can then right click the HDMI deice listed and choose disable from there.
Dong this removed the device from that menu and solved my problem.
No idea why it wouldn't take from device manager.
add a comment |
Update on this for Windows 8 (if anyone else comes across this):
ASUS Vivobook S400AC running Windows 8 fully updated -
Using a dell 23 inch monitor via HDMI, disabling the HDMI Audio from Device Manager did not solve my issue. Second I unplug and replug, or restart (either hibernate or full shutdown / reboot) the issue returns where is resets to the HDMI. If you right click the sound icon in bottom right of taskbar (by clock) and choose "playback devices" you can then right click the HDMI deice listed and choose disable from there.
Dong this removed the device from that menu and solved my problem.
No idea why it wouldn't take from device manager.
add a comment |
Update on this for Windows 8 (if anyone else comes across this):
ASUS Vivobook S400AC running Windows 8 fully updated -
Using a dell 23 inch monitor via HDMI, disabling the HDMI Audio from Device Manager did not solve my issue. Second I unplug and replug, or restart (either hibernate or full shutdown / reboot) the issue returns where is resets to the HDMI. If you right click the sound icon in bottom right of taskbar (by clock) and choose "playback devices" you can then right click the HDMI deice listed and choose disable from there.
Dong this removed the device from that menu and solved my problem.
No idea why it wouldn't take from device manager.
Update on this for Windows 8 (if anyone else comes across this):
ASUS Vivobook S400AC running Windows 8 fully updated -
Using a dell 23 inch monitor via HDMI, disabling the HDMI Audio from Device Manager did not solve my issue. Second I unplug and replug, or restart (either hibernate or full shutdown / reboot) the issue returns where is resets to the HDMI. If you right click the sound icon in bottom right of taskbar (by clock) and choose "playback devices" you can then right click the HDMI deice listed and choose disable from there.
Dong this removed the device from that menu and solved my problem.
No idea why it wouldn't take from device manager.
edited Jun 25 '13 at 18:33
Sathyajith Bhat♦
52.8k29156252
52.8k29156252
answered Jun 25 '13 at 15:52
reachcontrolreachcontrol
11
11
add a comment |
add a comment |
In my case I wanted the HDMI audio.
Navigate to system devices in the device manager.
You'll get two HD audio controllers.
Enable the one you want and disable the other.
add a comment |
In my case I wanted the HDMI audio.
Navigate to system devices in the device manager.
You'll get two HD audio controllers.
Enable the one you want and disable the other.
add a comment |
In my case I wanted the HDMI audio.
Navigate to system devices in the device manager.
You'll get two HD audio controllers.
Enable the one you want and disable the other.
In my case I wanted the HDMI audio.
Navigate to system devices in the device manager.
You'll get two HD audio controllers.
Enable the one you want and disable the other.
edited Apr 17 '14 at 12:55
random♦
12.9k84757
12.9k84757
answered Apr 17 '14 at 11:00
user316325user316325
11
11
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Super User!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f458714%2fwindows-not-remembering-default-audio-device%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown