Poor audio quality from speaker

after installing manjaro ‘nibia’ iam getting ppor sound quality in laptop speaker but good sound quality in earphone and bluetooth earphone.

My audio driver info:

 PCI 1f.3: 0403 Audio device
  SysFS ID: /devices/pci0000:00/0000:00:1f.3
  SysFS BusID: 0000:00:1f.3
  Hardware Class: sound
  Model: "Intel Sunrise Point-LP HD Audio"
  Vendor: pci 0x8086 "Intel Corporation"
  Device: pci 0x9d71 "Sunrise Point-LP HD Audio"
  SubVendor: pci 0x1028 "Dell"
  SubDevice: pci 0x078b 
  Revision: 0x21
  Driver: "snd_hda_intel"
  Driver Modules: "snd_hda_intel"
  Memory Range: 0xd2228000-0xd222bfff (rw,non-prefetchable)
  Memory Range: 0xd2200000-0xd220ffff (rw,non-prefetchable)
  IRQ: 131 (734 events)
  Module Alias: "pci:v00008086d00009D71sv00001028sd0000078Bbc04sc03i00"
  Driver Info #0:
    Driver Status: snd_hda_intel is active
    Driver Activation Cmd: "modprobe snd_hda_intel"
  Driver Info #1:
    Driver Status: snd_soc_skl is active
    Driver Activation Cmd: "modprobe snd_soc_skl"
1 Like

Can you post /etc/pulse/daemon.conf and the settings in alsamixer ?

/etc/pulse/demon.conf :

; daemonize = no
; fail = yes
; allow-module-loading = yes
; allow-exit = yes
; use-pid-file = yes
; system-instance = no
; local-server-type = user
; enable-shm = yes
; enable-memfd = yes
; shm-size-bytes = 0 # setting this 0 will use the system-default, usually 64 MiB
; lock-memory = no
; cpu-limit = no

; high-priority = yes
; nice-level = -11

; realtime-scheduling = yes
; realtime-priority = 5

; exit-idle-time = 20
; scache-idle-time = 20

; dl-search-path = (depends on architecture)

; load-default-script-file = yes
; default-script-file = /etc/pulse/default.pa

; log-target = auto
; log-level = notice
; log-meta = no
; log-time = no
; log-backtrace = 0

; resample-method = speex-float-1
; avoid-resampling = false
; enable-remixing = yes
; remixing-use-all-sink-channels = yes
; remixing-produce-lfe = no
; remixing-consume-lfe = no
; lfe-crossover-freq = 0

; flat-volumes = no

; rescue-streams = yes

; rlimit-fsize = -1
; rlimit-data = -1
; rlimit-stack = -1
; rlimit-core = -1
; rlimit-as = -1
; rlimit-rss = -1
; rlimit-nproc = -1
; rlimit-nofile = 256
; rlimit-memlock = -1
; rlimit-locks = -1
; rlimit-sigpending = -1
; rlimit-msgqueue = -1
; rlimit-nice = 31
; rlimit-rtprio = 9
; rlimit-rttime = 200000

; default-sample-format = s16le
; default-sample-rate = 44100
; alternate-sample-rate = 48000
; default-sample-channels = 2
; default-channel-map = front-left,front-right

; default-fragments = 4
; default-fragment-size-msec = 25

; enable-deferred-volume = yes
; deferred-volume-safety-margin-usec = 8000
; deferred-volume-extra-delay-usec = 0

I guess this is alsamixer settings:

Then you should first change daemon.conf:

; default-sample-format = s16le
; default-sample-rate = 44100
; alternate-sample-rate = 48000
; default-sample-channels = 2
; default-channel-map = front-left,front-right

to

default-sample-format = s24le
default-sample-rate = 19200
alternate-sample-rate = 96000
default-sample-channels = 2
default-channel-map = front-left,front-right

And test again.

Enter to sound configurations, then advance settings, and choose “analog stereo output” in internal audio