Volume low even at maximum












13















I have an Asus UL20FT-A1 laptop whose sound at maximum is not high enough. I have to open the Sound Settings menu and go over the limitation to get a high enough level. Any idea how I can fix this?










share|improve this question



























    13















    I have an Asus UL20FT-A1 laptop whose sound at maximum is not high enough. I have to open the Sound Settings menu and go over the limitation to get a high enough level. Any idea how I can fix this?










    share|improve this question

























      13












      13








      13


      3






      I have an Asus UL20FT-A1 laptop whose sound at maximum is not high enough. I have to open the Sound Settings menu and go over the limitation to get a high enough level. Any idea how I can fix this?










      share|improve this question














      I have an Asus UL20FT-A1 laptop whose sound at maximum is not high enough. I have to open the Sound Settings menu and go over the limitation to get a high enough level. Any idea how I can fix this?







      sound






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      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Dec 14 '13 at 15:30









      arianitarianit

      73117




      73117






















          5 Answers
          5






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          19














          Try the PCM settings in alsamixer - Open terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T) and type alsamixer:
          enter image description here



          You may need to select the sound card with F6 first.



          Turning up all the other controls may also help smiley






          share|improve this answer


























          • Thanks for the hint! For some reason media keys got broken on 16.10 after upgrade.

            – anatoly techtonik
            Oct 22 '16 at 8:57











          • On Windows this never happens, volume controls just work. Why does it happen on Linux?

            – Maxim Egorushkin
            Aug 27 '17 at 20:46











          • @MaximEgorushkin - AFAIK the PCM setting should by default be at max, just adding or modifying certain software or hardware may change that. Like with Windows and default audio devices :)

            – Wilf
            Aug 27 '17 at 23:53








          • 1





            @Wilf It is not the first time i have to use alsamixer to unmute or increase volumes on Ubuntu and Fedora. It is like it is initialised with random values. IMO, the volume control UI must do that, this step must be absolutely unnecessary. Just venting in general.

            – Maxim Egorushkin
            Aug 28 '17 at 0:20








          • 1





            @Wilf It is like there are two levels of volume settings and the UI tools operate on one level, alsamixer on another.

            – Maxim Egorushkin
            Aug 28 '17 at 0:58



















          2














          This works 100%...




          • right click on volume icon located at top right corner of screen (ubuntu 16 )

          • Select sound settings

          • Go to application section and raise volume up :D enjoy your high sound..






          share|improve this answer
























          • Definitely not a silver bullet and silly to suggest it might be so. Having said that, this worked for me so thumbs up.

            – ornous
            Jan 19 '18 at 21:51











          • That particular context menu item doesn't seem to exist on Ubuntu 18.

            – isherwood
            Sep 19 '18 at 19:29



















          1














          If you are using LUBUNTU you might need to try pavucontrol in terminal. In my custom setup ubuntu core + openbox + lxdp I have pavucontrol managing sounds.






          share|improve this answer































            1














            You should enable "Louder than 100%" in sound settings. That works at least in Ubuntu 17.10
            Screenshot






            share|improve this answer

































              1














              1. Open terminal
              Ctrl + Alt + T



              2. Install PavuControl sudo apt install pavucontrol



              3. Open PulseAudio Volume Control pavucontrol



              4. Output devices
              Set to 100% (0dB) the port are you using (Speakers / Headphones etc)



              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer























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                5 Answers
                5






                active

                oldest

                votes








                5 Answers
                5






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                19














                Try the PCM settings in alsamixer - Open terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T) and type alsamixer:
                enter image description here



                You may need to select the sound card with F6 first.



                Turning up all the other controls may also help smiley






                share|improve this answer


























                • Thanks for the hint! For some reason media keys got broken on 16.10 after upgrade.

                  – anatoly techtonik
                  Oct 22 '16 at 8:57











                • On Windows this never happens, volume controls just work. Why does it happen on Linux?

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 27 '17 at 20:46











                • @MaximEgorushkin - AFAIK the PCM setting should by default be at max, just adding or modifying certain software or hardware may change that. Like with Windows and default audio devices :)

                  – Wilf
                  Aug 27 '17 at 23:53








                • 1





                  @Wilf It is not the first time i have to use alsamixer to unmute or increase volumes on Ubuntu and Fedora. It is like it is initialised with random values. IMO, the volume control UI must do that, this step must be absolutely unnecessary. Just venting in general.

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 28 '17 at 0:20








                • 1





                  @Wilf It is like there are two levels of volume settings and the UI tools operate on one level, alsamixer on another.

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 28 '17 at 0:58
















                19














                Try the PCM settings in alsamixer - Open terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T) and type alsamixer:
                enter image description here



                You may need to select the sound card with F6 first.



                Turning up all the other controls may also help smiley






                share|improve this answer


























                • Thanks for the hint! For some reason media keys got broken on 16.10 after upgrade.

                  – anatoly techtonik
                  Oct 22 '16 at 8:57











                • On Windows this never happens, volume controls just work. Why does it happen on Linux?

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 27 '17 at 20:46











                • @MaximEgorushkin - AFAIK the PCM setting should by default be at max, just adding or modifying certain software or hardware may change that. Like with Windows and default audio devices :)

                  – Wilf
                  Aug 27 '17 at 23:53








                • 1





                  @Wilf It is not the first time i have to use alsamixer to unmute or increase volumes on Ubuntu and Fedora. It is like it is initialised with random values. IMO, the volume control UI must do that, this step must be absolutely unnecessary. Just venting in general.

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 28 '17 at 0:20








                • 1





                  @Wilf It is like there are two levels of volume settings and the UI tools operate on one level, alsamixer on another.

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 28 '17 at 0:58














                19












                19








                19







                Try the PCM settings in alsamixer - Open terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T) and type alsamixer:
                enter image description here



                You may need to select the sound card with F6 first.



                Turning up all the other controls may also help smiley






                share|improve this answer















                Try the PCM settings in alsamixer - Open terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T) and type alsamixer:
                enter image description here



                You may need to select the sound card with F6 first.



                Turning up all the other controls may also help smiley







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Aug 27 '17 at 23:54

























                answered Dec 14 '13 at 16:05









                WilfWilf

                21.4k1067129




                21.4k1067129













                • Thanks for the hint! For some reason media keys got broken on 16.10 after upgrade.

                  – anatoly techtonik
                  Oct 22 '16 at 8:57











                • On Windows this never happens, volume controls just work. Why does it happen on Linux?

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 27 '17 at 20:46











                • @MaximEgorushkin - AFAIK the PCM setting should by default be at max, just adding or modifying certain software or hardware may change that. Like with Windows and default audio devices :)

                  – Wilf
                  Aug 27 '17 at 23:53








                • 1





                  @Wilf It is not the first time i have to use alsamixer to unmute or increase volumes on Ubuntu and Fedora. It is like it is initialised with random values. IMO, the volume control UI must do that, this step must be absolutely unnecessary. Just venting in general.

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 28 '17 at 0:20








                • 1





                  @Wilf It is like there are two levels of volume settings and the UI tools operate on one level, alsamixer on another.

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 28 '17 at 0:58



















                • Thanks for the hint! For some reason media keys got broken on 16.10 after upgrade.

                  – anatoly techtonik
                  Oct 22 '16 at 8:57











                • On Windows this never happens, volume controls just work. Why does it happen on Linux?

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 27 '17 at 20:46











                • @MaximEgorushkin - AFAIK the PCM setting should by default be at max, just adding or modifying certain software or hardware may change that. Like with Windows and default audio devices :)

                  – Wilf
                  Aug 27 '17 at 23:53








                • 1





                  @Wilf It is not the first time i have to use alsamixer to unmute or increase volumes on Ubuntu and Fedora. It is like it is initialised with random values. IMO, the volume control UI must do that, this step must be absolutely unnecessary. Just venting in general.

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 28 '17 at 0:20








                • 1





                  @Wilf It is like there are two levels of volume settings and the UI tools operate on one level, alsamixer on another.

                  – Maxim Egorushkin
                  Aug 28 '17 at 0:58

















                Thanks for the hint! For some reason media keys got broken on 16.10 after upgrade.

                – anatoly techtonik
                Oct 22 '16 at 8:57





                Thanks for the hint! For some reason media keys got broken on 16.10 after upgrade.

                – anatoly techtonik
                Oct 22 '16 at 8:57













                On Windows this never happens, volume controls just work. Why does it happen on Linux?

                – Maxim Egorushkin
                Aug 27 '17 at 20:46





                On Windows this never happens, volume controls just work. Why does it happen on Linux?

                – Maxim Egorushkin
                Aug 27 '17 at 20:46













                @MaximEgorushkin - AFAIK the PCM setting should by default be at max, just adding or modifying certain software or hardware may change that. Like with Windows and default audio devices :)

                – Wilf
                Aug 27 '17 at 23:53







                @MaximEgorushkin - AFAIK the PCM setting should by default be at max, just adding or modifying certain software or hardware may change that. Like with Windows and default audio devices :)

                – Wilf
                Aug 27 '17 at 23:53






                1




                1





                @Wilf It is not the first time i have to use alsamixer to unmute or increase volumes on Ubuntu and Fedora. It is like it is initialised with random values. IMO, the volume control UI must do that, this step must be absolutely unnecessary. Just venting in general.

                – Maxim Egorushkin
                Aug 28 '17 at 0:20







                @Wilf It is not the first time i have to use alsamixer to unmute or increase volumes on Ubuntu and Fedora. It is like it is initialised with random values. IMO, the volume control UI must do that, this step must be absolutely unnecessary. Just venting in general.

                – Maxim Egorushkin
                Aug 28 '17 at 0:20






                1




                1





                @Wilf It is like there are two levels of volume settings and the UI tools operate on one level, alsamixer on another.

                – Maxim Egorushkin
                Aug 28 '17 at 0:58





                @Wilf It is like there are two levels of volume settings and the UI tools operate on one level, alsamixer on another.

                – Maxim Egorushkin
                Aug 28 '17 at 0:58













                2














                This works 100%...




                • right click on volume icon located at top right corner of screen (ubuntu 16 )

                • Select sound settings

                • Go to application section and raise volume up :D enjoy your high sound..






                share|improve this answer
























                • Definitely not a silver bullet and silly to suggest it might be so. Having said that, this worked for me so thumbs up.

                  – ornous
                  Jan 19 '18 at 21:51











                • That particular context menu item doesn't seem to exist on Ubuntu 18.

                  – isherwood
                  Sep 19 '18 at 19:29
















                2














                This works 100%...




                • right click on volume icon located at top right corner of screen (ubuntu 16 )

                • Select sound settings

                • Go to application section and raise volume up :D enjoy your high sound..






                share|improve this answer
























                • Definitely not a silver bullet and silly to suggest it might be so. Having said that, this worked for me so thumbs up.

                  – ornous
                  Jan 19 '18 at 21:51











                • That particular context menu item doesn't seem to exist on Ubuntu 18.

                  – isherwood
                  Sep 19 '18 at 19:29














                2












                2








                2







                This works 100%...




                • right click on volume icon located at top right corner of screen (ubuntu 16 )

                • Select sound settings

                • Go to application section and raise volume up :D enjoy your high sound..






                share|improve this answer













                This works 100%...




                • right click on volume icon located at top right corner of screen (ubuntu 16 )

                • Select sound settings

                • Go to application section and raise volume up :D enjoy your high sound..







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Nov 14 '17 at 16:22









                Bimal GrgBimal Grg

                1334




                1334













                • Definitely not a silver bullet and silly to suggest it might be so. Having said that, this worked for me so thumbs up.

                  – ornous
                  Jan 19 '18 at 21:51











                • That particular context menu item doesn't seem to exist on Ubuntu 18.

                  – isherwood
                  Sep 19 '18 at 19:29



















                • Definitely not a silver bullet and silly to suggest it might be so. Having said that, this worked for me so thumbs up.

                  – ornous
                  Jan 19 '18 at 21:51











                • That particular context menu item doesn't seem to exist on Ubuntu 18.

                  – isherwood
                  Sep 19 '18 at 19:29

















                Definitely not a silver bullet and silly to suggest it might be so. Having said that, this worked for me so thumbs up.

                – ornous
                Jan 19 '18 at 21:51





                Definitely not a silver bullet and silly to suggest it might be so. Having said that, this worked for me so thumbs up.

                – ornous
                Jan 19 '18 at 21:51













                That particular context menu item doesn't seem to exist on Ubuntu 18.

                – isherwood
                Sep 19 '18 at 19:29





                That particular context menu item doesn't seem to exist on Ubuntu 18.

                – isherwood
                Sep 19 '18 at 19:29











                1














                If you are using LUBUNTU you might need to try pavucontrol in terminal. In my custom setup ubuntu core + openbox + lxdp I have pavucontrol managing sounds.






                share|improve this answer




























                  1














                  If you are using LUBUNTU you might need to try pavucontrol in terminal. In my custom setup ubuntu core + openbox + lxdp I have pavucontrol managing sounds.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    1












                    1








                    1







                    If you are using LUBUNTU you might need to try pavucontrol in terminal. In my custom setup ubuntu core + openbox + lxdp I have pavucontrol managing sounds.






                    share|improve this answer













                    If you are using LUBUNTU you might need to try pavucontrol in terminal. In my custom setup ubuntu core + openbox + lxdp I have pavucontrol managing sounds.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Apr 23 '18 at 7:03









                    SD.SD.

                    1115




                    1115























                        1














                        You should enable "Louder than 100%" in sound settings. That works at least in Ubuntu 17.10
                        Screenshot






                        share|improve this answer






























                          1














                          You should enable "Louder than 100%" in sound settings. That works at least in Ubuntu 17.10
                          Screenshot






                          share|improve this answer




























                            1












                            1








                            1







                            You should enable "Louder than 100%" in sound settings. That works at least in Ubuntu 17.10
                            Screenshot






                            share|improve this answer















                            You should enable "Louder than 100%" in sound settings. That works at least in Ubuntu 17.10
                            Screenshot







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited Jul 25 '18 at 6:24

























                            answered Jul 16 '18 at 17:21









                            Medvediev V.Medvediev V.

                            1113




                            1113























                                1














                                1. Open terminal
                                Ctrl + Alt + T



                                2. Install PavuControl sudo apt install pavucontrol



                                3. Open PulseAudio Volume Control pavucontrol



                                4. Output devices
                                Set to 100% (0dB) the port are you using (Speakers / Headphones etc)



                                enter image description here






                                share|improve this answer




























                                  1














                                  1. Open terminal
                                  Ctrl + Alt + T



                                  2. Install PavuControl sudo apt install pavucontrol



                                  3. Open PulseAudio Volume Control pavucontrol



                                  4. Output devices
                                  Set to 100% (0dB) the port are you using (Speakers / Headphones etc)



                                  enter image description here






                                  share|improve this answer


























                                    1












                                    1








                                    1







                                    1. Open terminal
                                    Ctrl + Alt + T



                                    2. Install PavuControl sudo apt install pavucontrol



                                    3. Open PulseAudio Volume Control pavucontrol



                                    4. Output devices
                                    Set to 100% (0dB) the port are you using (Speakers / Headphones etc)



                                    enter image description here






                                    share|improve this answer













                                    1. Open terminal
                                    Ctrl + Alt + T



                                    2. Install PavuControl sudo apt install pavucontrol



                                    3. Open PulseAudio Volume Control pavucontrol



                                    4. Output devices
                                    Set to 100% (0dB) the port are you using (Speakers / Headphones etc)



                                    enter image description here







                                    share|improve this answer












                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer










                                    answered Jan 11 at 19:09









                                    Sorin VeștemeanSorin Veștemean

                                    211




                                    211






























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