![]() ![]() ![]() Just to be clear, the Mic & Gaming Machine sound are both going through the UR28M (hardware interface) & into the Streaming Machine via the same cable: Both are being heard by the Software Mixer. I want the sound on my gaming machine to go out to the UR28M (hardware interface) & into the streaming machine running the DSPMixFX (software mixer): The DSPMixFX (software mixer) can hear the audio just fine, but OBS does not. My mic is hooked up to a UR28M (hardware interface) which is hooked up via a USB 2.0 cable to the streaming machine running DSPMixFX (software mixer): The Software Mixer & OBS hear the Mic just fine & I can hear it through my headphones which are hooked up to the UR28M (hardware interface). Game Video & Audio is being sent to & received by the Streaming Machine: Confirmed Say if you had a soundboard or another computer for making sound effects etc.I have a Dual PC set up (gaming machine & dedicated streaming machine). You can hook other things up to your mixer as well since you have extra inputs available. Technically you could also control your pc audio through the obs software as well, but since the mixer signal already has it, it's useless. The only thing you won't be able to control via the mixer is the audio delay, which is set in the obs software. If you hook everything up like this, you'll be able to control your xbox audio volume, pc audio volume, microphone volume all through the mixer, while being able to use OBS to control everything else. Say you're playing an Xbox game, but don't want the stream to hear your computer audio, maybe you're listening to music or just have chat sites making noise etc, you can hit the "To St/To Mon" button to allow/disallow the stream to hear your computer audio. The reason the PC is hooked to channel 9/10 is because you can choose whether or not to send the PC audio to your stream. You can turn the computer audio all of the way down in OBS, because you'll be able to control the audio on the mixer. The reason it's hooked up as so is that you can tell your OBS to use the line in as your "audio input". Mixer Monitor out -> your headphones/speakers Mixer Stereo Out -> Line in on your soundcard/motherboard. Microphone -> mixer channel 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 doesn't matter. Googling around shows that there is indeed an option to do that. ![]() Since you want to use the mixer to control the individual volumes, you'll have to deal with the delay in your OBS software. The issue is that the capture card will LIKELY introduce a bit of delay in your video stream while the audio will not be delayed if it is hooked up through the mixer. Since you capture your Xbox video/audio using a capture card, it makes using the mixer. The first assumption I'm going to make is that you want to stream Xbox games and PC games. Ok, I don't have a diagram, but I'll describe it better. I want to hook up my xbox and pc to the mixer and just be able to set the levels based on the mixer not the obs software if that makes senseĪlso if you have a diagram i could follow that would be awesome as well! This is very helpful but I don't really get it haha. You'd be technically feeding the computer sounds back into the computer, but most mixers have the option of sending one input either to the headphones OR to the speakers, so you could mute the computer audio when sending it back into the computer for recording/streaming. probably the main out to your computer's line in, and plug your headphones into the headphone Jack on the mixer. The mic will go on one of the mic channels. Hooking the PC and Xbox to the mixing board is easy. microphone.Īlso, I just purchased literally almost the exact same mixer just without all the digital effects. So you send the game audio to the monitor output, which is hooked up to your headphones, and the mic output to the computer to act as a. I say this because if you're streaming and playing an online game with push to talk, you don't want to feed your game audio to the same place your microphone is going, because no one wants to hear your game audio over the push to talk. That way you can avoid recording your own computer sounds. See the "To Mon/To St" button, that'll send channels 9/10 to either the monitor out, or the main "stereo out". You'd be technically feeding the computer sounds back into the computer, but most mixers have the option of sending one input either to the headphones OR to the speakers, so you could mute the computer audio when sending it back into the computer for recording/streaming.Īh, in your case it's channels 9 and 10. ![]()
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