
- G933 disable volume scroll drivers#
- G933 disable volume scroll driver#
- G933 disable volume scroll full#
It overemphasizes the mids and takes away the expansive soundstage that Dolby Digital Surround gives to the sound.

I personally did not like the Headphone X anyway so never miss this feature. LGS_8.72.107 is the version i found most stable for me. Uninstall the present LGS from your PC and just use any of the versions before the above mentioned LGS version (without DTS Headphone X). The version it was introduced in was LGS_8.74.80. And finally discoverd that the problem happened when Logitech introduced the DTS Headphone X surround feature.
G933 disable volume scroll driver#
Made a restore point on the pc and started testing each version with a system restore between each driver version. I found the following FTP site and downloaded all the LGS versions since the launch of these headsets which i guess was Aug 2015. Knowing this, i set about finding if previous versions of LGS could help me out. Beats me why logitech has chosen to do this.
G933 disable volume scroll drivers#
The drivers on these are capable of much more output but its the LGS that holds it back. nothing seemed to work.īut glad to say that i found the solution after some time spend and a lot of patience. I checked many threads on the net and listed out all the solutions presented by people and logitech reps. I just bought it, and while the sound was of excellent quality i was really disappointed with the Volume level and the bass output of the set. I have the wired version of the Artemis Spectrum the G633.
G933 disable volume scroll full#
You can get up to 30% more volume and more bass from these drivers with full surround. I'd imagine the same can be said for wireless audio, especially considering that even wired connections can introduce latency (depending on what's in the chain and what type of processing is being done to the signal). I honestly don't know how much latency is introduced through a wireless audio connection, but I know that for gaming the latency introduced for wireless mice and keyboards can be unacceptable. You can actually get surprisingly good cans for $150-$300. For the price of a wireless gaming headset you can actually get a set of professional headphones used for tracking and/or mixing. With a hard wire connection you can more easily place an amp within the chain to increase the output levels, and you never have to worry about having low power or needing to charge batteries. First is power, both of the signal level being output and the actual power draw of the drivers (speakers) producing the audio. I've never been a fan of wireless anything (keyboards, mice, speakers, headphones, etc) for a few reasons. I do some music production work, so I always look at audio from that perspective. For all other intensive purposes the A-50's are a horribly designed headset. It was replaced with the Astro A-50 headset, which I found to be a terrible headset, however it does give higher volume output due to it's own Mix-amp. The G933 did not have a pre-amp or mix-amp, unless plugged into my PC speaker system. So yeah, long story short: Go back to corded with a decent headphone amp. My answer to "low levels" is always either "get an amp or a pre-amp" (depending on where the issue is in the audio chain). Sounds like the headphones are simply underpowered.
