Delta 1010 Drivers Linux

 
Delta 1010 Drivers Linux

I have a fresh install of Ubuntu 12.04 LTS (64-bit) with an M-Audio delta 1010LT soundcard. I installed Mudita24 which allowed me to hear system sounds and applications once I turned up the DAC volumes in the analog volume tab.

My problem is this: I cannot seem to get Ubuntu (pulseaudio) to recognise my inputs, I have the ADC faders turned up in mudita24 and I can even see the input volume when I speak into the mic (on monitor inputs tab) but there doesn't seem to be a way to select which input I want to use. In the pulse audio input options I just get a choice of Analog Input or iec958-stereo-input both with the subheading: ICE172Envy24 PCI Multi-Channel I/O Controller. I don't know if anyone has experience of this, my mic is going into H/W input 3 in the Delta1010LT, I'm trying to get teamspeak working. Okay, so I solved my issue, I'm not sure if this is the 'best' way but it works for what I need, flawless pulseaudio for normal desktop operations and a working solution for mumble/teamspeak, and it was pretty easy to accomplish thanks to pablomme over at the launchpad.net forums. I'm a Linux noob and i struggled for days with a jack setup but in the end I couldn't achieve what I wanted that way. This is more for users who aren't going to use their Delta 1010LT for pro-audio applications (I personally use my windows boot for that atm). If you are looking to use the Delta 1010LT for recording and mixing etc, I'm pretty sure you want a jack setup instead of pulse audio (although you can get both working with the pulseaudio jack sink).

Anyway on with the solution, as I mentioned before Mudita24 is considered the preferred mixer for these cards, so download that from the ubuntu software centre or using the terminal: sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get mudita24 Then open mudita and go to the Analog Volume tab (furthest to the right on mine), and turn up everything! (you can tweak the gains later) I don't know why they are set to zero by default but nothing at all works unless you turn up the Analog Volume sliders.

DAC are the outputs (Digital to analog) and ADC are the inputs (Analog to Digital). After you've done this go to the monitor inputs tab and you should be able to see a level when you talk into your mic. Now to get this sound into the pulseaudio. After much scouring of various websites I found this solution from pablomme: run ' cat /proc/asound/cards', and note the card's name in the brackets, e.g.

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M Audio Delta 1010 Drivers

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