Question / Help OBS Audio / Desktop Audio

KG-

New Member
Hi, I'm just wondering how this works... If I have my desktop audio at 30% and my obs audio at 100%, does that mean that it is sending out 30% (as I hear it) or overwrites the 30% and sends out 100%.

Alternatively, if i have desktop at 30%, and obs audio at 30%, does this mean that i'm sending out 30% of 30%... so 9% audio? Someone please end my misery here...

I have found the right balance for me, 30% desktop, 75% mic. I'm just trying to figure out if OBS audio should be the same percentages, or 100%.

Oh, and as a side note, why do i have so many audio tracks? Shouldn't there be only 2?

vUXnUoy.png


FVpzY9O.png
 

PiLord

Member
If you turn down system audio, that's what would be 100% on OBS. So if you have system audio at 50% and you 50% OBS to the stream/recording it would be 25%
 
  • Like
Reactions: KG-

KG-

New Member
So obs audio should be at 100% (mic and desktop), in order to transmit 75% of my mic, and 30% of my desktop?

Why do most streamers alter the obs audio then?

Could anyone else confirm this please?
 

Sapiens

Forum Moderator
The OBS audio sliders modify whatever is sent from Windows, so if you leave the OBS sliders at 100% then you'll record the same volume levels that are sent from Windows. Streamers modify the sliders in OBS for a variety of reasons, e.g. when their system volume levels are fine for their use but aren't well-balanced for a stream (maybe the game is a little too loud/quiet).
 
  • Like
Reactions: KG-

KG-

New Member
The OBS audio sliders modify whatever is sent from Windows, so if you leave the OBS sliders at 100% then you'll record the same volume levels that are sent from Windows. Streamers modify the sliders in OBS for a variety of reasons, e.g. when their system volume levels are fine for their use but aren't well-balanced for a stream (maybe the game is a little too loud/quiet).

Thank you for the clarification!
 
Top