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I am also using Win 7 SP1 dunno if that helps. Make sure you have HD connector from fron panel to mobo, not AC97 to co-ordinate with bios front panel settings!! ASUS REALTEK AUDIO DRIVER WINDOWS 7 64 BIT INSTALLMake sure you do install RT HD drivers and set RT in bios to HD (NOT AC97) and same HD for front panel. Make sure the Realtek is "this device is working properly", then make generic disabled. When you install Win 7 it creates its own MS sound entry (Intel Hi Def Sound Dev on southbridge) in Dev Man, then when you add the Realtek HD drivers, it adds that one. Now I have to try a billion things before I can send this board back as well and buy an entirely different one. And the manuel doesn't say anything about these having to be connected in order for the read panel jacks to work. ASUS REALTEK AUDIO DRIVER WINDOWS 7 64 BIT MANUALAlso, the manual of the motherboards calls these 20/24-pin and 4/8-pin respectively.Īlso, I haven't tried connecting the front panel connector on the motherboard to front panel audio jacks, since they don't exist on my case. Also, I believe they're supposed to be backwards compatible, unless you need the extra power. Both worked fine in the old motherboard which had a 24-pin connector and a 4-pin connector and seems to work fine in this, apart from the sound. It also have a 4-pin 12V power connector instead of the now normal 8-pin connector. My current PSU has a older 20-pin power cable instead of the now normal 24-pin. The only thing I haven't tried is a newer PSU and a case with front panel audio that I can connect to the motherboard. Sound worked fine in the old motherboard in the same case. But what? I use the same case and PSU as with my old build, an Antec 1040B II with an Antec 400W PSU. Now, this is either some kind of systematic defect or issue with this motherboard or audio chip, or something wrong with the rest of my hardware. I also tried booting on several different 32-bit and 64-bit Linux live cds. There are settings that disables the back panel if the front panel is connected and so forth. I also tried fiddling with every imaginable setting in the Realtek control panel. I also tried both the drivers on ASUS' homepage and also the latest ones from Realteks homepage. ![]() In the Realtek control panel, the analog speakers are chosen, not the optical output (Toslink) or the S/PDIF. The Realtek control panel detects the speakers put into this jack just fine. As I wrote in the original post, I am using the ANALOG green minijack on the pack panel. Also, I can choose between HD and AC97, tried both. In all cases, the onboard sound is reported as recognized and working by the OS, but there is NO SOUND from the back panel minijack. The same speakers works fine with other sources via the same minijack. The Realtek Control Panel recognizes which minijack is used, and it asks me if I inserted headphones or speakers (Line Out), I choose Line Out. I tried all the different minijacks on the backpanel. I tried booting on several Linux live cds, both 32-bit and 64-bit. I tried installing a 32-bit OS, Windows XP. I tried just using the original Microsoft HD Audio driver that Windows defaults to. I tried the newest driver directly from Realteks homepage. I tried fiddling with the Realtek Control Panel, disabling and enabling all sorts of options. ASUS REALTEK AUDIO DRIVER WINDOWS 7 64 BIT DOWNLOADI tried installing the latest 64-bit driver from the download page of that particular motherboard. I tried choosing either AC97 or HD in the BIOS. I tried disabling and enabling onboard sound in the BIOS. The onboard sound chip is Realtek ALC892. My case doesn't have a front panel minijack so the front panel connector on the motherboard is not connected to anything. I haven't tried the front panel minijack. ![]() Except the onboard sound! No sound, no matter what, at least from the analog lime green minijack on the back panel. I installed Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit and everything seems to work. ASUS REALTEK AUDIO DRIVER WINDOWS 7 64 BIT PROI bought ASUS P8H67-M PRO B3 last week, along with a Core i5-2500K, 8GB RAM and a 120GB OCZ Vertex 2 SSD.
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