Question / Help Audio Help Echo in Stream

DoubleARon16

New Member
Hello Everyone,

What am I doing wrong? I have an echo on my stream on Twitch, the thing is when I monitor the outputs in OBS everything sound fine with no echo.

I am using 1 lav mic, 2 blue yeti, and 4 c922 webcams.

Why would the echo be on the Twitch stream only,
could it be my internet bandwidth, what about if sound is being picked up on the c922 webcams and i just don't see it in the mixer.

I have disabled all inputs in the sound settings.

I hope you can help!
DoubleARon16
 

Narcogen

Active Member
Are you capturing your default windows sound device?

Is OBS set to send monitoring output to your default windows sound device?

Are any of your audio devices selected more than once?

In Advanced Audio Properties, which devices are assigned to each track, and in Settings > Output, what track are you streaming?
 

DoubleARon16

New Member
Are you capturing your default windows sound device?

Is OBS set to send monitoring output to your default windows sound device?

Are any of your audio devices selected more than once?

In Advanced Audio Properties, which devices are assigned to each track, and in Settings > Output, what track are you streaming?

I am not capturing my default windows sound device

I monitor my audio through default windows sound device

My audio devices are only selected once

This is one might be the fix. I do not understand this section of the audio properties. all of the tracks are clicked on my audio devices.

Should this be different? Do you have any Tutorial about tracks?
 

Narcogen

Active Member
https://obsproject.com/forum/resour...lity-recording-and-multiple-audio-tracks.221/

For recording, you can have different devices on separate tracks, and this can be useful when editing. For that purpose you would generally want separate tracks (say, one for voiceover, one for game audio).

Streaming only uses one track, the track selected in the output settings. You can get doubled audio if you have the same device on more than one track, and end up streaming a track that has that device more than once.

One way to test for what causes echoes or doubling is to disable all monitoring and all sources of audio, and then add them back one at a time until the doubling occurs, so that you know which sources, devices and tracks are connected to the doubling.
 
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