Sapper Woody
New Member
Hello,
I am running Windows 10, and doing "Let's Play" videos for YouTube. I noticed an echo in my gameplay audio, but not in my voice. I did some troubleshooting, and found out how to separate the audio into different tracks. Cool feature, which will make my editing that much easier.
However, the echo continued. I eventually came to the conclusion that my mic was too sensitive and was picking up my headset audio. However, as a test, I muted my headset and recorded something. When I played back, the desktop audio was still echoing into the microphone audio.
To be clear, in one track, I can only hear my desktop audio, and in the other track (the mic track) I can hear both my microphone and my desktop audio. It appears that somehow the desktop audio is bleeding into the microphone audio. Is there an easy way to solve this? It's not too bad, but having any echo at all is not nearly as professional as having it be crisp.
Thanks!
-Sapper Woody
I am running Windows 10, and doing "Let's Play" videos for YouTube. I noticed an echo in my gameplay audio, but not in my voice. I did some troubleshooting, and found out how to separate the audio into different tracks. Cool feature, which will make my editing that much easier.
However, the echo continued. I eventually came to the conclusion that my mic was too sensitive and was picking up my headset audio. However, as a test, I muted my headset and recorded something. When I played back, the desktop audio was still echoing into the microphone audio.
To be clear, in one track, I can only hear my desktop audio, and in the other track (the mic track) I can hear both my microphone and my desktop audio. It appears that somehow the desktop audio is bleeding into the microphone audio. Is there an easy way to solve this? It's not too bad, but having any echo at all is not nearly as professional as having it be crisp.
Thanks!
-Sapper Woody