New
#11
Here are some modified HP IDT Audio Drivers (derived from HP SoftPaq #59291).
They got my ProBook's embedded sound chip working again on Win 10 Pro x64
(including the SRS Premium Sound Control Panel/HP Beats Audio Functionality)
HP IDT Audio Driver (x86 and x64 systems):
File Version: 6.10.6428.0 (modified)
ZIP version:
http://www.filehosting.org/file/deta...86_x64_WDA.zip
Executable RAR version:
http://www.filedropper.com/hpidtx86x64wda
Note: For x86 systems, the feature set is reduced.
I had trouble getting bass sound whenever I use to hear music from my laptop after updating windows 10 & your fix worked out so well for me, I was initially updating checking & updating Realtek high definition audio which was installed in my Dell laptop & therefore cudn't see any disable all enhancement option in sound device. A soon as i installed high definition audio device manually I cud see Disable all enhancement option right after that. I checked that option & was good to go. thank you so much. finally was abled to solve this issue after soo long.
I had* a similar problem, though different. My problem was that my Asus desktop was pushing bass AND normal sound out of the front speakers, even with swap center with sub-woofer checked in the sound manager. Using "stereo" config it worked alright, but no surround with that. This problem kept giving headaches when listening to music (literally 0_0) because the bass was pounding out of the front. Used the update drivers thing in device manager (I'm an IT guy, I have no Idea why I didn't think of this myself, lol) and updated the Realtek HD Audio driver AND disable the Intel Display Audio Driver (which was trying to steal sound from my monitor's speakers and possibly one cause of the bass malfunction). I believe that the cause of this wasn't really the driver's fault, but actually the fact that before I set up surround sound, my sub-woofer was connected to the sub-woofer port on the back of my front speakers, so the driver assumed it was still there when I removed it. But since the sub was not there, bass came out alongside the front audio (yes, my sub was moved to the sub port on my sound-card). Now that the drivers have been reinstalled/updated, the audio works fine.
PS: Yes, my monitor has speakers, yes those speakers are routed for surround, but they are not the front speakers. They are the rear, I know my "surround" isn't "surround" but it works, and it sounds good regardless.
I want to use this solution, but I get a message from Windows 10 saying that if I do it it will make my system unstable. Did you get this message and just do it anyway? I'm on Dell.