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<p>Hi DryHeat122! </p>
<br>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:mailman.3.1639137602.15981.mythtv-users@mythtv.org">
<pre class="moz-quote-pre" wrap="">I had to replace my AV receiver because the old one crapped out. It would
not take the VGA signal coming from my Myth Box, so I had to replace its
video card with one that has HDMI out. I did so and it is working fine.
When I test the speakers in settings, they work. However when I try to
play something in Myth there is no audio.
When I go to frontend settings, it shows several ALSA output devices, a
default, two ALSA:dmix CARD=Intel, DEV=0 or 1 (builtin audio), and four
ALSA:dmix CARD=Nvidia, DEV=3,7,8,9. Why are there four devices for one
card? What happened to 4,5,6? Regardless, no sound when I select any of
the Nvidia devices.
Another odd thing is that when I select one of the Nvidia devices it says
Nvidia HDMI0 at the bottom. But in settings the device is listed as
HDMI/Display port 2.
How to fix?</pre>
</blockquote>
<p>I have one Frontend (connected to a TV) where I really have to
shove the HDMI cable into the port. It seems like the connection
is made because the TV displays video but has no audio until that
little extra shove.</p>
<p>As for the four devices for one card, only one will work.
Easiest/surest way I've found is the next couple of paragraphs:<br>
</p>
<p>At Terminal "aplay -l" (the letter, not the number) might give
you a narrowed-down selection. Also at Terminal <font
face="Liberation Mono, monospace">speaker-test -c2 -twav
-Dplughw:1,0</font> might be less fustrating and
time-consuming than switching in and out of MythTV -- figure out
what the system wants and then plug that into MythTV. "-c2" is
two channels (stereo), "-twav" will have a female voice chanting
something like "left front, right front". The -D switch is your
options from aplay.</p>
<p>Also at Terminal "alsamixer" will pop-up a slider GUI. Make sure
none of the (needed) inputs are muted (MM) - you can ignore 'mic',
etc. Also make sure the volumes are cranked up -- 100% is fine.
Reminds me: in Ubuntu check the speaker icon at the top right is
at 100%.<br>
</p>
<p>One last thing, and I don't think this applies to you but I'll
stick it in for anyone else troubleshooting and reading this
thread. By default the Raspberry Pi will turn off the HDMI port
if nothing is detected at the other end. "Oddly" this means it
turns off HDMI if there's an HDMI switch or if the TV is off (as
with a cron job to reboot nightly). Uncommenting two lines in
/boot/config.txt fixes.<br>
</p>
<p>Barry<br>
</p>
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