OBS Audio issues when a android device listens to the livestream

sbaudio

New Member
I recently changed over to OBS and the audio works great for every application when users are listening except android. They can hear the audio when using headphones but not on the external speaker of the phone. The audio is primarily a digital sound and extremely low.

My audio is recording in stereo and have tried change to Mono but then no one can hear the audio.

The audio is ran by a 3.5mm from the camera to an xlr cable from the soundboard.
 

AaronD

Active Member
The audio is ran by a 3.5mm from the camera to an xlr cable from the soundboard.
That's the key. You're putting a stereo unbalanced signal into a mono balanced input. Both standards use the same connector, but they're not compatible with each other.

Stereo unbalanced on TRS is:
  • Tip = Left
  • Ring = Right
  • Sleeve = Ground
Mono balanced on TRS is:
  • Tip = Hot
  • Ring = Cold
  • Sleeve = Ground
The balanced input takes the difference, Hot minus Cold, and passes that on as the intended signal. The MASSIVE benefit is that the noise picked up by a long cable run, falls out, and you're left with just the signal...if the signal was actually sent as balanced, which you're not.

When you put a stereo unbalanced signal in there - you can imagine what gets mis-connected to where, just by matching the physical names - it doesn't know the difference, and so it dutifully takes the difference and passes that on.
  • If you have a signal that was intended to be stereo, like music for example, then everything that is panned center disappears and you're left with what was off-center. The mix depends on how far off-center each thing is. This is can be used on purpose to remove vocals for karaoke...with varying results in what you end up with for an accompaniment.
  • If you essentially have a mono signal presented as centered-stereo, then it disappears entirely.



The solution is to use a different cord that goes into 2 inputs of the sound board: one for left and one for right. If they're separate mono channels, then you have the choice of controlling them together, or using them separately as an audience signal and a cue track or whatever. Or if it's always going to be a single stereo mix, you can make the operator's job a little bit easier by using both inputs of a stereo channel if your board has one available.
 
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