Allow me to summarize, and correct me if I'm wrong: Your speakers work fine, but the audio output on the front panel of your PC seems to be too quiet when you plug in your earbuds.
I am inclined to believe you have a software issue. Even the least expensive motherboard (mobo) chipset will still blow your ears out if you have earbuds plugged into the 3.5mm audio output and the volume maxxed out.
The front and rear 3.5mm audio output is identical. It is sending a low-wattage audio signal to either your headphones or speakers. If you plugged your speakers into the front jack, you should have the same result as you do now with them plugged into the rear jack. The reason plugging headphones into the front jack disables the rear is because, by design, the mobo is designed to assume front-audio jacks take priority. The same actual holds true for home stereos, too. When I plug headphones into my Yamaha receiver, it disables the speaker outputs.
Just for giggles, try unplugging your speakers and plugging your earbuds directly into the audio jack on the rear of your PC and seeing if the volume remains too low. If it works in the rear jack but is still quiet in the front jack, it could be a loose mobo wire (the wire connecting the mobo chipset to the front port). It could still also be a software issue.
Make sure that you have gone into Control Panel and adjusted the audio settings. Check for any third-party software that may also affect the audio settings. Sometimes you can have the Volume cranked up, but the "WAV" volume is turned down, and so you get very little volume.
Also, if you have not already determined your sound card model, do so. For example, my previous Gigabyte mobo was the GA-P35-DS3R, which uses a Realtek ALC889A audio chipset. You may also have a seperate sound card, though this is less likely. You should determine your chipset or sound card model so that you can download the most updated drivers, which may include a hardware fix. Updated drivers also often contain better audio controls than the default windows controls.
Here is one of the two questions I had. From what I understand, the desktop speakers I have possess their own drivers...Chaay
This is actually unlikely. Most PC speakers simply amplify the audio output of your card. Unless they plug into a USB outlet or use your SPDIF output (which I do not believe they do in this instance), they are unlikely to have software drivers. If you provide your speaker model I can better assist.I have my Xbox 360 plugged into the line-in port via an HD AV cable, and my speakers in that green audio port. So I think it's impossible for me to add 3.5mm headphones because I have no ports left, right?Chaay
Ideally we want to try to use that front-panel headphone output. This will give you access to a wider range of quality headphones, and you'll be able to use those headphones with more devices (e.g. your mp3 players, DS, etc.). If we cannot get your headphone jack working, depending on your budget we can either:- Get a new sound card and install it inside your PC (likely no feasible since yours is on loan)
- Get a USB soundcard (easy, inexpensive)
- Get a USB headset (least desirable, typically low quality)
I have more feedback, but start with this, and come back with details. Honestly I'm hoping you'll be able to plug your headphones into the front jack, fiddle with the volume control settings, and get it working.
Happy gaming,
Boz
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