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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Joined: Mar 2015
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So my battle weary pair of headphones gave up the ghost and I had to buy a new one. The new one is better. Everything sounds clearer, including an old suspicion of mine: the headphone/monitor output on my audio interface is quite noticeably louder on the left channel! That always "kind of" bugged me, but now it's too clear and uncomfortable. I suppose there is nothing I can do but replace the interface... Is there? 
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Always thought the same thing about my interface until I had my hearing tested. Its not the interface, its me. Definitely some hearing loss in my left ear. Ain't getting old fun?!!
Win11, Intel i7 7700K 4.2Ghz, 32Gb RAM, 2x1Tb HD, 500Gb NVMe, BIAB/RB 2026, MOTU 828MK3 audio, MOTU Midi Express, Yamaha Montage 7, DX7II, TX802, Motif XS Rack, Roland Fantom XR Rack, Oberheim Matrix 1000, VoiceLive3 Extreme, Kontakt 6, SampleTank 4.3
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Always thought the same thing about my interface until I had my hearing tested. Its not the interface, its me. Definitely some hearing loss in my left ear. Ain't getting old fun?!! That thought occurred to me, but connecting the headphones to the computer's onboard sound card or my tablet disproves that theory.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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What is the interface device? Does it have a master balance somewhere that could have been altered at some point in time and be the root cause?
It's pretty easy to do on some interfaces .. others it's buried a little deeper in the menus and harder to find for some it just doesn't exist.
I do not work here, but the benefits are still awesome Make your sound your own!
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Lexicon Omega. http://lexiconpro.com/en/products/omegaSadly, no balance control. Sometimes, I can reduce the problem by jiggling the volume knob slightly. The pots are really bad on this interface. I've seen complaints about them elsewhere.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Yeah, the POTS affecting the output could definitely be a factor.
Tried cleaning them?
I do not work here, but the benefits are still awesome Make your sound your own!
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Reverse the cans on your head and confirm it.
So, does the interface have a software control panel? Many do and there are input and balance controls in there as well as EQ and other things.
Be sure it's not something like that.
Also look at the DAW you use and be sure you have things centered and balanced.
I'd wager it's a software or setting in the DAW on how you mix. If the other cans didn't show it to be louder on the left, that could have been done by you without knowing it. You had a deficiency in the cans and to compensate you turned one side up more in the recording process.
It could be a lot of things besides the interface being left biased.
You can find my music at: www.herbhartley.comAdd nothing that adds nothing to the music. You can make excuses or you can make progress but not both. The magic you are looking for is in the work you are avoiding.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Yeah, the POTS affecting the output could definitely be a factor. Tried cleaning them? I don't know how to clean them. I don't believe they will come off. Reverse the cans on your head and confirm it. Yes, confirmed.  So, does the interface have a software control panel? Many do and there are input and balance controls in there as well as EQ and other things. No. Just drivers.  If the other cans didn't show it to be louder on the left, that could have been done by you without knowing it. You had a deficiency in the cans and to compensate you turned one side up more in the recording process. I've connected these headphones directly to the computer's onboard sound card and to a tablet, and they sound unbiased.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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This is from the website:
A REAL MIXER
Unlike standard computer I/O boxes based on a patch bay concept, the Lexicon Omega Studio is designed and built around the same paradigm as large-format recording consoles. An 8-input, 4-Bus, 2-output USB I/O mixer with inserts, instrument input, MIDI I/O and complete metering and monitoring functions gives you the freedom to record up to 4 tracks at once and mix without the need for additional mixing hardware.
This is what we're talking about. Play with the mixer and check the levels and balance. If that's ok then open up Cubase or whatever DAW you're using and check that balance as well.
Bob
Biab/RB latest build, Win 11 Pro, Ryzen 5 5600 G, 512 Gig SSD, 16 Gigs Ram, Steinberg UR22 MkII, Roland Sonic Cell, Kurzweil PC3, Hammond SK1, Korg PA3XPro, Garritan JABB, Hypercanvas, Sampletank 3, more.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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The problem with that approach is that the interface puts bias on the headphone output, which will be passed on (in reverse) to the recording if I try to "fix" it.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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First and easiest test to clean them is to twist it back and forth a bunch.
Just spin it left/right a bunch, then reset. Do this for Pan, Gain, whatever dials may be affecting the signal.
If 'dirty' is heard or noticed a spray cleaner may be in order, along with some more twisting back and forth. But I'd start with twisting each dial back and forth a few times and then returning to original position, and checking.. Have the speakers/headphones on at the time so you can hear if one of them is getting dirty (you'll hear it when you turn it).
I do not work here, but the benefits are still awesome Make your sound your own!
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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First and easiest test clean them is to twist it back and forth a bunch.
Just spin it left/right a bunch, then reset. Do this for Pan, Gain, whatever dials may be affecting the signal.
If 'dirty' is heard or noticed a spray cleaner may be in order, along with some more twisting back and forth. But I'd start with twisting each dial back and forth a few times and then returning to original position, and checking.. Have the speakers/headphones on at the time so you can hear if one of them is getting dirty (you'll hear it when you turn it). +1. http://store.caig.com/s.nl/sc.2/category.188/.fRegards, Bob
Last edited by 90 dB; 05/26/17 01:43 PM.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Yup, before I gave up my last mixer if I had a knob that would start to get noisy I sprayed cleaner on it and turn it up and down about 100 times until the noise went away.
 Steve BIAB/RB 2022, Pro Tools 2020, Korg N5, JBL LSR 4328 Powered Monitors, AKG/Shure Mics. PC: Win11 PRO, 4 TB M2 SSD, 2 TB HD, 128 GB Memory
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Open your Windows audio settings and check the balance for all your playback settings. Typically you can get to these settings by clicking on the speaker icon in the bottom, right corner of your screen or through control panel.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Joined: Apr 2009
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This is from the website:
A REAL MIXER
Unlike standard computer I/O boxes based on a patch bay concept, the Lexicon Omega Studio is designed and built around the same paradigm as large-format recording consoles. An 8-input, 4-Bus, 2-output USB I/O mixer with inserts, instrument input, MIDI I/O and complete metering and monitoring functions gives you the freedom to record up to 4 tracks at once and mix without the need for additional mixing hardware.
This is what we're talking about. Play with the mixer and check the levels and balance. If that's ok then open up Cubase or whatever DAW you're using and check that balance as well.
Bob Yup exactly. When you installed the software, it's very possible the mixer/control panel also installed but you didn't notice it because if it's like mine, it didn't create a desktop icon. Look in the start menu and check for a folder named for the interface or something very similar. Open it and look to see if there's an executable in there. That's where my control panel was hiding. You can create a desktop icon from there.
You can find my music at: www.herbhartley.comAdd nothing that adds nothing to the music. You can make excuses or you can make progress but not both. The magic you are looking for is in the work you are avoiding.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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The problem with that approach is that the interface puts bias on the headphone output, which will be passed on (in reverse) to the recording if I try to "fix" it. I understand that you are saying only the headphone output is out of balance with the left side being more dominate? correct. So, if you compensate the headphone imbalance by adjusting the mic/line LR balance, then the recorded balance (which is correct and only becomes imbalanced by you manually adjusting the pan knobs)? If the above is true, that indicates the problem is isolated to the headphone circuitry. There is likely an internal bias adjustment that would take any TV/CB type repair shop longer to get access taking the case apart than to repair. Likely cost if that's all they find wrong will be their minimum bench charge. Certainly cheaper than replacement cost. Just speculation on my part taken from the information listed here on the forum post but I'd suggest getting an electronics technician to look at it before disposing of it. Charlie
BIAB 2026:RB 2026, Latest builds: Dell Optiplex 7040 Desktop; Windows-10-64 bit, Intel Core i7-6700 3.4GHz CPU and 16 GB Ram Memory.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Have you tried cleaning the headphone output jack?
Chris
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Many replies here. Many, many thanks. I really appreciate it. When you installed the software, it's very possible the mixer/control panel also installed but you didn't notice it because if it's like mine, it didn't create a desktop icon.
Look in the start menu and check for a folder named for the interface or something very similar. Open it and look to see if there's an executable in there. That's where my control panel was hiding. You can create a desktop icon from there.
Interesting idea, but it didn't work in this case. I could only find two folders: one contains executables to uninstall and reinstall, the other contains two DLL files. I don't think this interface has any kind of software based control panel. Open your Windows audio settings and check the balance for all your playback settings. Typically you can get to these settings by clicking on the speaker icon in the bottom, right corner of your screen or through control panel. That doesn't help either. I don't have the problem when using the internal sound card, I just have it when I use the USB interface. First and easiest test to clean them is to twist it back and forth a bunch. Just spin it left/right a bunch, then reset. If 'dirty' is heard or noticed a spray cleaner may be in order, along with some more twisting back and forth. But I'd start with twisting each dial back and forth a few times and then returning to original position, and checking.. Have the speakers/headphones on at the time so you can hear if one of them is getting dirty (you'll hear it when you turn it). Yup, before I gave up my last mixer if I had a knob that would start to get noisy I sprayed cleaner on it and turn it up and down about 100 times until the noise went away. That makes sense and sounds like the best lead. I will have to go out and see if I can find that spray cleaner, and give it a try. I'm just unsure about it because the knobs won't come off and they don't look like they will allow any liquid to get into their shaft wells easily enough. But I will try. Have you tried cleaning the headphone output jack? No, I haven't, and I've never heard about that. How does one clean an output jack? Is there some particularly appropriate brush or swab for that kind of job? (...) If the above is true, that indicates the problem is isolated to the headphone circuitry. There is likely an internal bias adjustment that would take any TV/CB type repair shop longer to get access taking the case apart than to repair. Likely cost if that's all they find wrong will be their minimum bench charge. Certainly cheaper than replacement cost. I hope you're wrong, but you could be right. I will try the cleaning first before I resort to... uh... surgery. 
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Try cleaning the pots without the cleaner first. Dry. Rotate each pot 100X's from left to right, sometimes pots are “sealed” and won't benefit from lube, but rotation will spread the internal lube around the pot. For the 1/8 jack, just plug the plug in and out of the jack multiple times. Lube will work here: spray some lube on the plug and work it in and out of the jack. Deoxit is the best I've found: https://www.amazon.com/D5S-6-DeoxIT-Spray-Contact-Cleaner/dp/B071DZVYSCRegards, Bob
Last edited by 90 dB; 05/28/17 11:40 AM.
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Help! Tech S.O.S (Off topic)
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Isopropyl Alcohol 90% will also work to clean post and jacks. Foam tipped swabs are preferred over cotton tipped Q-tip swabs.
Charlie
BIAB 2026:RB 2026, Latest builds: Dell Optiplex 7040 Desktop; Windows-10-64 bit, Intel Core i7-6700 3.4GHz CPU and 16 GB Ram Memory.
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