- Joined
- May 2, 2012
- Messages
- 1
- Mac
- Classic Mac
- Mobile Phone
Hi everyone:
I'm sorry for my poor English.
I have the same configuration and the same problem in my OS X Mavericks.
For your information I've got the sound "hiccups" as well on Windows 8.1 and any Linux distribution but I'm using a software work-around on those OS (just telling the driver to disable the jack detection in the front panel). I don't know how to do the same in OS X though.
If I disconnect physically the wire from the MB to the front panel the problem persists. If I use the black rear connector or the headphones connector in the front panel the the sound is perfect.
So IMO it's a hardware/firmware problem. Three different OS, same weird behaviour. I wonder if Gigabyte knows this. I just upgraded the BIOS but the problem is still here.
I've tried to disable the CPU power save modes (C1E, EIST, ...) with no success.
Ven
I'm sorry for my poor English.
I have the same configuration and the same problem in my OS X Mavericks.
For your information I've got the sound "hiccups" as well on Windows 8.1 and any Linux distribution but I'm using a software work-around on those OS (just telling the driver to disable the jack detection in the front panel). I don't know how to do the same in OS X though.
If I disconnect physically the wire from the MB to the front panel the problem persists. If I use the black rear connector or the headphones connector in the front panel the the sound is perfect.
So IMO it's a hardware/firmware problem. Three different OS, same weird behaviour. I wonder if Gigabyte knows this. I just upgraded the BIOS but the problem is still here.
I've tried to disable the CPU power save modes (C1E, EIST, ...) with no success.
Ven