Re: Fix - For Missing Volume Control
Greets squallman,
As you can see, there are a number of things that can go wrong with your volume control from studying this thread.
Post #53 points out that many users with external sound cards may have this same problem. Especially Creative's Multimedia center which wants to embed your volume control into it's program. And Sound Blaster cards. Clean installs also seem to very problematic at losing the Volume Control.
Post #75 from qwecom suggests running the services.msc option which may solve your problem. It looks similar to the AC97Audio setting in older Windows version from my post #71, and needs to be set to Auto.
Lt Data's suggestion in post #63 suggests removing your external sound card to see if Windows will detect your original audio device. Then work from there to get your external sound card going.
*If your audio device or drivers are missing (resulting in shaded options you can't select from) or have missing or corrupted files, the easiest method seems to be to uninstall the audio devcie from your Control Panel Device Manager and allow Windows to detect and reinstall it.
*You may at some point during these steps unplug your computer for 15 minutes or so and allow the memory to refresh.
I don't know how helpful Creative's or Sound Blaster's web help might be? But these both may be options to check into.
I hope this is helpful. Update us on your findings.
Best regards.
Craze
Greets squallman,
As you can see, there are a number of things that can go wrong with your volume control from studying this thread.
Post #53 points out that many users with external sound cards may have this same problem. Especially Creative's Multimedia center which wants to embed your volume control into it's program. And Sound Blaster cards. Clean installs also seem to very problematic at losing the Volume Control.
Post #75 from qwecom suggests running the services.msc option which may solve your problem. It looks similar to the AC97Audio setting in older Windows version from my post #71, and needs to be set to Auto.
Lt Data's suggestion in post #63 suggests removing your external sound card to see if Windows will detect your original audio device. Then work from there to get your external sound card going.
*If your audio device or drivers are missing (resulting in shaded options you can't select from) or have missing or corrupted files, the easiest method seems to be to uninstall the audio devcie from your Control Panel Device Manager and allow Windows to detect and reinstall it.
*You may at some point during these steps unplug your computer for 15 minutes or so and allow the memory to refresh.
I don't know how helpful Creative's or Sound Blaster's web help might be? But these both may be options to check into.
I hope this is helpful. Update us on your findings.
Best regards.
Craze
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