Have you tried a compressor to solve this problem? Luke On Mon, 17 Feb 2003, Scott Howell wrote: > Actually I've spent a great deal of time with this problem and have yet > to find a solution. Regardless of what I've done in terms of volume or > input on a mixing board, I've not found anything that worked well. It > was as Janina said about pops and distortion to even virtually no > volume. I've offten thought maybe it had to do with the impedence of the > Doubletalks, but not to sure. They generally are configured in such a > way to work with headphones and small speakers and there even with > speakers you have to be careful. I can't recall what the impedence is on > a walkman type headphone, but I imagine its nowhere what most inputs are > on sound cards nor mixing boards. > I also believe that if its impedence, getting a device to change this > would be expensive. I remember the transformers for microphones when I > was playing in a band to go from low to high impedence were not cheap. > > > > On Sun, Feb 16, 2003 at 05:18:03PM -0600, Gregory Nowak wrote: > > If you would have lowered the volume on the synth, you probably would have gotten a better signal as a result. > > > > Greg > > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup >