<html><head><style type="text/css"><!-- DIV {margin:0px;} --></style></head><body><div style="font-family:times new roman, new york, times, serif;font-size:12pt"><div>> I had the issue where after a year of working perfectly, one of my<br>> tuners started not getting audio. Then several months later the other<br>> did the same. My fix was to add the following to /etc/rc.d/rc.local:<br>> ivtvctl -d /dev/video0 -q1<br>> ivtvctl -d /dev/video1 -q1<br>><br>> I did it for the first tuner with issues, and just duplicated it when<br>> the other developed the same issue.<br>><br>> I'm on old drivers (as long as it works, I don't upgrade), so maybe the<br>> options have changed, but for the version I have here, -q does:<br>> -q,
--set-audio-input=<num><br>> set the current audio input to <num> [VIDIOC_S_AUDIO]<br><br>(sorry for yet another doublepost)<br><br>I've tried this before and it doesnt help. I still get this:<br><br> [176002.123209] cx25840 3-0044: Detected audio mode: forced mode<br>
[176002.123213] cx25840 3-0044: Detected audio standard: no detected audio standard<br>
[176002.123216] cx25840 3-0044: Audio muted: no<br>
[176002.123218] cx25840 3-0044: Audio microcontroller: detecting<br>
[176002.123221] cx25840 3-0044: Configured audio standard: automatic detection<br>
[176002.123224] cx25840 3-0044: Configured audio system: automatic standard and mode detection<br><br>I find it very strange that all of the sudden it just dies. No way of telling it the audio standard? Did you have exactly this?<br><br>regards<br><br><br></div></div></body></html>