The multi-channel 2.1 standard does not even exist, so obviously a motherboard or its soundcard cannot be expected to support it. Am I missing something here?Įdit: Well, no one posted any help (guess Tom's doesn't have as many audio heads as I thought), so I will post my own solution, along with what I've learned.įirst of all, 2.1 is a speaker configuration, not a multi-channel standard. ![]() What's the best solution for me? It seems odd that 2.1 is considered so unusual that realtek doesn't support it. My friend told me I could set it to 5.1 and then deal with losses of information/quality due to my 2-speaker setup. I had the idea to simply plug in the subwoofer to the orange output (it's labeled Center/Subwoofer Speaker Out), but when I check the realtek driver configuration page, I realized that realtek only provides support for 2, 4, 5.1, and 7.1. (http /I'm using standard speakers with speaker wire, so I am outputting to them via a small amp (which doesn't have its own output to subwoofer, and nor do the speakers). I'm using a gigabyte motherboard with windows 7 64bit. ![]() ![]() I have a new subwoofer I want to add to my 2.0 system.
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