Enhance bass in sound system
Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP
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I use a high quality headphone which capable of producing really great sound. On another computer and on various OS, it was able to produce some deep bass sound. I previously used my headphone on a Lenovo L540 (with Windows, and so Lenovo provide Windows drivers).
I recently changed for a new L540 and a fresh Fedora. The problem is that the sound is now a little bit more "flat" and lose its deep bass.
Even if I look on the Internet how to enhance sound on Linux, I only found how to use alsamixer
to put the sound beyond 100%.
Do you have any idea on how to enhance sound quality on Linux ? I DO NOT want a music player with equalizer, as I would like to enhance sound for all my sound streams (Youtube, VLC, ...).
fedora audio
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
I use a high quality headphone which capable of producing really great sound. On another computer and on various OS, it was able to produce some deep bass sound. I previously used my headphone on a Lenovo L540 (with Windows, and so Lenovo provide Windows drivers).
I recently changed for a new L540 and a fresh Fedora. The problem is that the sound is now a little bit more "flat" and lose its deep bass.
Even if I look on the Internet how to enhance sound on Linux, I only found how to use alsamixer
to put the sound beyond 100%.
Do you have any idea on how to enhance sound quality on Linux ? I DO NOT want a music player with equalizer, as I would like to enhance sound for all my sound streams (Youtube, VLC, ...).
fedora audio
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
up vote
2
down vote
favorite
I use a high quality headphone which capable of producing really great sound. On another computer and on various OS, it was able to produce some deep bass sound. I previously used my headphone on a Lenovo L540 (with Windows, and so Lenovo provide Windows drivers).
I recently changed for a new L540 and a fresh Fedora. The problem is that the sound is now a little bit more "flat" and lose its deep bass.
Even if I look on the Internet how to enhance sound on Linux, I only found how to use alsamixer
to put the sound beyond 100%.
Do you have any idea on how to enhance sound quality on Linux ? I DO NOT want a music player with equalizer, as I would like to enhance sound for all my sound streams (Youtube, VLC, ...).
fedora audio
I use a high quality headphone which capable of producing really great sound. On another computer and on various OS, it was able to produce some deep bass sound. I previously used my headphone on a Lenovo L540 (with Windows, and so Lenovo provide Windows drivers).
I recently changed for a new L540 and a fresh Fedora. The problem is that the sound is now a little bit more "flat" and lose its deep bass.
Even if I look on the Internet how to enhance sound on Linux, I only found how to use alsamixer
to put the sound beyond 100%.
Do you have any idea on how to enhance sound quality on Linux ? I DO NOT want a music player with equalizer, as I would like to enhance sound for all my sound streams (Youtube, VLC, ...).
fedora audio
fedora audio
asked Oct 6 '14 at 13:22
mithrop
1165
1165
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1 Answer
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up vote
1
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You can use the Pulseaudio-Equalizer. To install:sudo dnf install pulseaudio-equalizer
.
Though it might be a bit unstable, it hasn't been much trouble for me.
The arch-wiki also suggests using pulseeffects, but I can't tell how much that will that help, as I haven't used it. You can also try that.
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
1
down vote
You can use the Pulseaudio-Equalizer. To install:sudo dnf install pulseaudio-equalizer
.
Though it might be a bit unstable, it hasn't been much trouble for me.
The arch-wiki also suggests using pulseeffects, but I can't tell how much that will that help, as I haven't used it. You can also try that.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
You can use the Pulseaudio-Equalizer. To install:sudo dnf install pulseaudio-equalizer
.
Though it might be a bit unstable, it hasn't been much trouble for me.
The arch-wiki also suggests using pulseeffects, but I can't tell how much that will that help, as I haven't used it. You can also try that.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
You can use the Pulseaudio-Equalizer. To install:sudo dnf install pulseaudio-equalizer
.
Though it might be a bit unstable, it hasn't been much trouble for me.
The arch-wiki also suggests using pulseeffects, but I can't tell how much that will that help, as I haven't used it. You can also try that.
You can use the Pulseaudio-Equalizer. To install:sudo dnf install pulseaudio-equalizer
.
Though it might be a bit unstable, it hasn't been much trouble for me.
The arch-wiki also suggests using pulseeffects, but I can't tell how much that will that help, as I haven't used it. You can also try that.
edited Nov 28 at 14:17
Jeff Schaller
37.2k1052121
37.2k1052121
answered Nov 28 at 13:59
Shahzeb Shommit
113
113
add a comment |
add a comment |
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