Audio Test*It works, but not much to see.*
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Uploader Comments (marinaneon2)
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All Comments (13)
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By the way, composites are those yellow/white/red plugs that normally go in a TV (progressive scans hae green and blue rather than yellow). A tuner refers to those thick coaxial cables that old TVs use and what some cable TV services give you.
You might not have the plug for every kind, however. That you should check first so you don't have to check your capturer's settings again, in case it only has outlets for composites.
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NO! You mustn't delete this! It's sheer AWESOMENESS!!!
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I'm sorry. I probably shouldn't have uploaded this, but I was half asleep whem I did.
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Thanks! I was going to upload the ending, but I just can't seem to find Part 2. But now audio works at least. :)
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When it sometimes just turns black and white, that's usually a hardware problem, not a software one. Do you have your video capturer set to "composite video input" rather than "tuner" (if there's such a setting)? Mine is set to "tuner" by default, and it brings me a black and white picture without sound. (It stays black and white, however.)
You can also check your cables and outlets and see if there's dust or a loose conneciton or whatnot.
Overhazard 3 years ago
It seems whenever it glitches, it turns black and white, then turns back to color. There actually are certain settings like composite that I didn't even glance at yet. Thanks! I'll go check and see if some of those are my problems.
marinaneon2 3 years ago
it turned blk n' wyt
otap111 3 years ago
Don't worry, that's fixed. My color saturation wasn't right.
marinaneon2 3 years ago
Not bad. What did you do for the audio?
Bndu 3 years ago
All I had to do was use the software that came with my capture device. The whole time, the audio source wasn't the capture card itself, but some other audio source on the computer.
marinaneon2 3 years ago