And please forgive me if this has been addressed…I have been search for hours.
I am using the Behringer UMC22 to plug into the USB port on my PC with Win 10 (64bit). Recording in stereo in Audacity. The driver is the standard USB CODEC. No other drivers installed.
The mic channel on the device works great using either the mic or an electric guitar. The instrument channel gives no sound level in Audacity at all. I tried phantom power on/off, monitor on/off. I can hear the instrument through headphones fine.
Both the mic and the instrument work when using another DAW (Studio one), but I like Audacity and want to use it.
Tried going into the Win sound settings and get nothing for the instrument (mic in). Tried setting it to 2 channel stereo…but it will not (even with Audacity not on). It is set to 1 channel 41k (CD quality). But, again, all works fine with Studio One.
Do you mean there is no option to set the device to “2 channel stereo” in the Recording tab of the Windows Sound Control Panel? There “should” be an option to do that.
Thank you for the note. There is an option to do that…but when I do it, I get a message that says device in use. I select and hit “apply.” But, when I go back and check…it is still in 1 channel.
I do not have audacity of anything else open.
I can see the green input light, light up, on the umc22, but nothing on the audio input in Win. If I put the mic in the XLR mic input…get signal…but still cannot select 2 channel.
On my version of Windows 10, “Settings” only has the options:
System
Personalisation
Gaming
Update and Security
If I go to:
“Settings > System > Sound”
I can select which audio device I want to use in the “Input” (Exmple: “Microphone (USB Audio Codec)”), and then choose “Device Properties”.
That brings up this window:
I can then select the “Advanced” tab, and select “2 Channels 16-bit 44100 Hz (CD Quality)” here:
Yes, thank you. That is it exactly. However, I can select 2 channel (CD) but when I hit ‘apply’ it says device in use and the change does not take.
I go to task manager and there is nothing open.
Not sure what to do next…or why this works fine with Studio One.
Really like Audacity, though. Also, if I save the file as an mp3 in Studio one, I can bring it up in audacity and both the voice and guitar play. Sounds very good. And great tools to work on the file with…really like that. Wish I could record both with it.
It looks like Microsoft have made a total mess of this.
Try this, but ensure that all other programs are closed before you start (my computer crashed on one of my attempts, even though this is a clean and fully updated Windows 10 testing machine - there appear to be system level bugs here).
Right click on the loudspeaker icon in the Taskbar and select “Open Sound Settings”
Click on the link “Sound Control Panel”
Close the “Sound Settings” window.
In “Sound Control Panel”, select the “Recording” tab
Ensure that the default device is set to any available device that is NOT the device that you want to change.
Right click on the device that you want to change and select “Properties”
Select the “Advanced” tab
Select the Channels / sample rate that you require
Not sure about that till we get to do some more testing - I did some testing today HP Envy SSD W10
I can’t test Steve’s Steps for changing the recording device settings as my new(ish) HP laptop only allows me to have recording input at 16-bit 48000Hz with the onboard soundcard - the dropdown is grayed-out and inoperable.
Later I also tried my external USB soundcard (Edirol UA-1EX) and that was the same with recording settings
For playback however, while my Edirol will only allow 16-bit 48000 Hz my onboard soundcard output has the option of 16-bit 4800 and 24-bit 4800, I appear to be able to switch between the two settings (even though the onboard soundcard mic is set as the default) and both settings seem to facilitate playback.
The first time I did it I got the warning that the device was in use by another app and if I changed it that app may lose sound - but I was able to OK that and the change was made.
Audacity seems to play quite happily regardless of whether the soundcard is set to 16-bit or 24-bit - and iTunes plays with either setting too.
So on this PC it looks like a warning that can be overridden rather than a no-can-do bug by Microsoft.
But jolly glad we got you fixed and working with Steve’s workaround, navigate40
In the process I had to also download the LAME for Windows, but the driver installer guided me through that. All works perfectly now after a couple of days of frustration. Did my first recording today.
I have almost the same issue and I’ve tried the solution near the end which almost worked but…
I can see the bars/leds lighting up so it is picking up the guitar through the audio interface (see attachment) but I can’t hear it through my pc headphones, nor will it pickup in Bandlab even though it works perfectly fine with a MIC.
Update: I’ve actually got it working using the Line 1 input. The Inst 2 input just not playing! Which is fine, I’ll just have to keep swapping the cables between mic and guitar! Bahhhh!!
As with most USB interfaces, the two inputs are hard wired:
Input 1 → Channel 1
Input 2 → Channel 2
An alternative to swapping the cables around, is that when you want to record from input 2, set Audacity to record “2 channels (stereo)” (in the Device Toolbar). This will record channel 2 in the right channel of the stereo track. When the recording is done, you can “Split to Mono” (see: Splitting and Joining Stereo Tracks - Audacity Manual) and delete the empty “left” track (Click on the in the top left corner of the track).
I was too facing this issue when I downloaded Behringer’s recommended driver (ASIO4ALL) from their official website. I did some digging and found one YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRmnDkS3Wzo video where this guy was using Behringer USB WDM AUDIO 2.8.40. After installing it, my guitar line is working absolutely normal.
I was too facing this issue when I downloaded Behringer’s recommended driver (ASIO4ALL)
Audacity doesn’t support ASIO so it won’t work.* It’s only useful if you are using an ASIO application.
The Behringer uses standard Microsoft-supplied drivers so you don’t have to download anything.
ASIO4ALL is a “translator” that allows non-ASIO hardware to work with ASIO applications. But it doesn’t work the other way around… It does NOT make a non-ASIO application (like Audacity) work with ASIO hardware/drivers.
***** If you’re a programmer you can compile Audacity with ASIO support but Audacity doesn’t have a license to distribute an application with ASIO support.