"RokuKevin" wrote:I've experienced volume differences between older and newer Netflix content(ie. Season 1 of Buffy is comparatively quieter than Season 4 of Bones) and a large difference between the video and audio channels. I've begun to make a habit of turning down the volume before entering an audio channel because the volume is so much louder than in the video channels. For reference, the Roku audio output is attached to my cheapo home-theater-in-a-box system via stereo RCA cables. The volume scale goes to 25 in half-step increments and I generally never need to go above 10 for any device attached to the HTiB. For video consumption, the Roku usually sits around 7-8, while audio consumption through the Roku requires a 3-4 setting for a comparable perceived volume.
Good idea.
We've discussed this in the past, but have previously chosen the "make thinks simpler path". It's worth tracking how wide spread the audio volume issue is. We've also discussed adding "Advanced Settings" for those that want to fiddle with all the knobs.
---Kevin
"gonzotek" wrote:
the Roku audio output is attached to my cheapo home-theater-in-a-box system via stereo RCA cables. The volume scale goes to 25 in half-step increments and I generally never need to go above 10 for any device attached to the HTiB.
"TheEndless" wrote:It might be. Just to be clear, I was only comparing video(Netflix, Amazon, TWiT, Rev3, iTPC, TED) vs. audio playback(Pandora, TuneIn Radio, MOG) on the Roku itself, not its overall volume compared to other devices. As far as that goes, I think for video, it's overall a little louder than the TiVo hooked via hdmi to the same amp. Maybe 5-10%, just enough to make me reach for the remote in order to adjust. And that could be down to the amp, it was a Woot special 🙂"gonzotek" wrote:
the Roku audio output is attached to my cheapo home-theater-in-a-box system via stereo RCA cables. The volume scale goes to 25 in half-step increments and I generally never need to go above 10 for any device attached to the HTiB.
For what it's worth, all three of my Rokus are connected via HDMI for audio, and the volume level is pretty consistent with the rest of my components, so this might be an analog-only issue.
"greubel" wrote:Good point.
Dynamic range compression might be good for some folks but I would say that most of my users play music. And I wouldn't want a method that distorts the media.
"greubel" wrote:
Dynamic range compression might be good for some folks but I would say that most of my users play music. And I wouldn't want a method that distorts the media.
Just a simple gain control like there is for the sound effects volume. Maybe even use those settings ??