• Add-on automatic volume control

    From micky@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jun 10 12:44:41 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can
    be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if
    I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC.
    Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Ralph Mowery@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jun 10 12:56:00 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    In article <fg9e6jlapiskj9c280ue9gek4lpijckdqh@4ax.com>, NONONOmisc07 @fmguy.com says...

    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can
    be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if
    I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC.
    Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.



    All the change in volume is done at the station in audio. All radios
    will do the same thing. TV sets used to be really loud during
    comercials but the FCC made them put a limit on how much louder they
    could be than the programs.

    Whatever radio you get you will have to find a device to go between the
    radio and the speaker.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From =?UTF-8?B?8J+YjiBNaWdodHkgV2FubmFiZ@21:1/5 to micky on Mon Jun 10 18:15:11 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    micky wrote on 6/10/2024 12:44 PM:
    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can
    be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if
    I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC.
    Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.


    The only thing I can think of is to feed your TV audio output into the microphone jack of a Windows computer, and then use a software equalizer
    with "telephone" equalizer setting to enhance the human voice and
    suppress the music (and all other non-human voice frequencies). When
    your TV is playing, the computer speaker output will be mainly clear
    human voice. When the TV commercial comes on, most of the music will
    still be suppressed, and the human voice amplitude will be "clipped"
    (slightly distorted).

    I think I have posted the Windows software equalizer before. It is quite
    a lengthy step to install that free software. I will only re-post if
    someone is really interested. You'll also need to fiddle with the
    hardware to feed the TV audio output into the computer's microphone jack.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Judge Arthur Enron@21:1/5 to micky on Mon Jun 10 22:26:34 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    micky wrote:
    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can
    be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if
    I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC.
    Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.


    Raspberry PI 4 -
    Auto Volume Control & EQ setup for CABLE TV -
    Keep the volume same on all channels

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3X01edbZk8

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From micky@21:1/5 to Enron on Tue Jun 11 00:15:29 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    In sci.electronics.repair, on Mon, 10 Jun 24 22:26:34 UTC, Judge Arthur
    Enron <judge@get.trump> wrote:

    micky wrote:
    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can
    be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if
    I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC.
    Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same
    problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement
    https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.


    Raspberry PI 4 -
    Auto Volume Control & EQ setup for CABLE TV -
    Keep the volume same on all channels

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3X01edbZk8

    it's something related to what I want, but it's software.
    Ralph's and Mighty's suggestions are also appreciated, but not close
    enough.

    Changed search words and found this https://www.amazon.com/LEMONKTV-Control-Device-Karaoke-Machine/dp/B07H49JB8S/ref=sr_1_1
    Not just for Karaoke. Small but still too big for the speaker space,
    but I can mount it outside the radio, cut the wires to the speaker(s)
    and connect to each part half of a cable with RCA jacks on the end.

    The ratings are few and from 1 to 5. $50.

    The sound engineer who gave it 1 star says the only other model is
    disconintued but another reviewer started at 5 stars, went down to 1,
    then said that Rolls SL33B was better. It's 3.9 starts on 131 reviews
    for $89. Still not that high, but sounds better than nothin'. If I can
    go to bed listening to the radio, it will be worth it. It has some sort
    of gain control and a threshold adjustment, and a "red LED for general indication of the amount of gain reduction in the circuit". The first
    one didn't have any of this.

    https://www.amazon.com/rolls-SL33B-Stereo-Program-Limiter/dp/B004GK7PAI/ref=sr_1_1
    Called a program limiter for some reason. It's a Utah company. Maybe
    they speak differently out there. I guess I'll google that to see if
    there are others. yes, there are, at goknight.com using the term compressor/limiter -- must be a technical name -- but it's $208 or 289.

    When I got to the product website itsself it says "helps control the
    level over loud, obnoxious commercials, for example." That's half of
    what I had in mind, and the other half is similar.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From micky@21:1/5 to NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com on Tue Jun 11 01:11:58 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    In sci.electronics.repair, on Mon, 10 Jun 2024 12:44:41 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can
    be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if
    I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    The first internet station I had a problem with was CNN. Would CNN live
    be what's called a streaming service??? I hear that term often but I
    have almost no idea what it means. What about the fact that I
    listened to CNN via iHeartRadio. iHeartRadio is a streaming service,
    right?

    Because a proposed law would regulated the volume of commercials on
    "streaming services".

    https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/senate-bill/4173
    This bill applies certain requirements concerning the volume of
    commercials to video streaming services that are supported by
    advertisements (e.g., Hulu). It also modifies enforcement related to
    those requirements.
    Current law requires commercials transmitted via broadcast, cable, and satellite television to have the same average volume as the underlying programming. Under this bill, the Federal Communications Commission must
    apply through rulemaking similar requirements to ad-supported video
    streaming services.


    https://www.whec.com/local/good-question-why-are-commercials-louder-than-the-program-on-tv/
    "There is a law meant to regulate this called the Calm Act and it was
    passed by Congress in 2010. We (WHEC)also have a system in place to
    monitor and record our volume levels, so they don’t violate the law.

    The Calm Act requires commercial noise levels to be about the same as
    the program. Since it passed, it has been criticized by viewers who say
    it’s not being enforced.

    In May 2022, another law was introduced addressing these complaints.
    It’s called the Calm Modernization Act. It applies to streaming services
    and also modifies the enforcement of the original law.

    The Federal Communications Commission is responsible for enforcement.
    Right now, the FCC uses a complaint-driven enforcement process. If the
    Calm Modernization Act passes, there would be a greater penalty from the
    FCC for violations."



    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC.
    Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same >problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement >https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Retirednoguilt@21:1/5 to micky on Tue Jun 11 10:32:10 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    On 6/11/2024 12:15 AM, micky wrote:
    In sci.electronics.repair, on Mon, 10 Jun 24 22:26:34 UTC, Judge Arthur
    Enron <judge@get.trump> wrote:

    micky wrote:
    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can >>> be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if >>> I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC. >>> Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same
    problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement
    https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.


    Raspberry PI 4 -
    Auto Volume Control & EQ setup for CABLE TV -
    Keep the volume same on all channels

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3X01edbZk8

    it's something related to what I want, but it's software.
    Ralph's and Mighty's suggestions are also appreciated, but not close
    enough.

    Changed search words and found this https://www.amazon.com/LEMONKTV-Control-Device-Karaoke-Machine/dp/B07H49JB8S/ref=sr_1_1
    Not just for Karaoke. Small but still too big for the speaker space,
    but I can mount it outside the radio, cut the wires to the speaker(s)
    and connect to each part half of a cable with RCA jacks on the end.

    The ratings are few and from 1 to 5. $50.

    The sound engineer who gave it 1 star says the only other model is disconintued but another reviewer started at 5 stars, went down to 1,
    then said that Rolls SL33B was better. It's 3.9 starts on 131 reviews
    for $89. Still not that high, but sounds better than nothin'. If I can
    go to bed listening to the radio, it will be worth it. It has some sort
    of gain control and a threshold adjustment, and a "red LED for general indication of the amount of gain reduction in the circuit". The first
    one didn't have any of this.

    https://www.amazon.com/rolls-SL33B-Stereo-Program-Limiter/dp/B004GK7PAI/ref=sr_1_1
    Called a program limiter for some reason. It's a Utah company. Maybe
    they speak differently out there. I guess I'll google that to see if
    there are others. yes, there are, at goknight.com using the term compressor/limiter -- must be a technical name -- but it's $208 or 289.

    When I got to the product website itsself it says "helps control the
    level over loud, obnoxious commercials, for example." That's half of
    what I had in mind, and the other half is similar.

    Your desired solution may fit into the "too hard" category. The
    pragmatic solution is to find something else to lull you to sleep.
    Consider a white noise machine for example. I haven't checked, but
    there may even be a smartphone app for what you want with a built-in
    timer so you don't drain the battery all night. There are also apps
    that provide restful sound tracks to aid in meditation. Combined with
    using the "do not disturb" setting on the smartphone to avoid undesired
    audio notifications, it just may do the trick. There may even be
    internet "stations" that provide wall to wall soothing music that
    wouldn't require any additional equipment. Think outside the box when
    plan A doesn't seem feasible.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From micky@21:1/5 to HapilyRetired@fakeaddress.com on Tue Jun 11 12:24:16 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    In alt.home.repair, on Tue, 11 Jun 2024 10:32:10 -0400, Retirednoguilt <HapilyRetired@fakeaddress.com> wrote:

    On 6/11/2024 12:15 AM, micky wrote:
    In sci.electronics.repair, on Mon, 10 Jun 24 22:26:34 UTC, Judge Arthur
    Enron <judge@get.trump> wrote:

    micky wrote:
    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can >>>> be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials >>>> are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if >>>> I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else >>>> is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC. >>>> Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same >>>> problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement
    https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but >>>> it's software, and I need hardware.


    Raspberry PI 4 -
    Auto Volume Control & EQ setup for CABLE TV -
    Keep the volume same on all channels

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3X01edbZk8

    it's something related to what I want, but it's software.
    Ralph's and Mighty's suggestions are also appreciated, but not close
    enough.

    Changed search words and found this
    https://www.amazon.com/LEMONKTV-Control-Device-Karaoke-Machine/dp/B07H49JB8S/ref=sr_1_1
    Not just for Karaoke. Small but still too big for the speaker space,
    but I can mount it outside the radio, cut the wires to the speaker(s)
    and connect to each part half of a cable with RCA jacks on the end.

    The ratings are few and from 1 to 5. $50.

    The sound engineer who gave it 1 star says the only other model is
    disconintued but another reviewer started at 5 stars, went down to 1,
    then said that Rolls SL33B was better. It's 3.9 starts on 131 reviews
    for $89. Still not that high, but sounds better than nothin'. If I can
    go to bed listening to the radio, it will be worth it. It has some sort
    of gain control and a threshold adjustment, and a "red LED for general
    indication of the amount of gain reduction in the circuit". The first
    one didn't have any of this.

    https://www.amazon.com/rolls-SL33B-Stereo-Program-Limiter/dp/B004GK7PAI/ref=sr_1_1
    Called a program limiter for some reason. It's a Utah company. Maybe
    they speak differently out there. I guess I'll google that to see if
    there are others. yes, there are, at goknight.com using the term
    compressor/limiter -- must be a technical name -- but it's $208 or 289.

    When I got to the product website itsself it says "helps control the
    level over loud, obnoxious commercials, for example." That's half of
    what I had in mind, and the other half is similar.

    Your desired solution may fit into the "too hard" category. The
    pragmatic solution is to find something else to lull you to sleep.
    Consider a white noise machine for example. I haven't checked, but

    Thanks for the suggestion.

    there may even be a smartphone app for what you want with a built-in
    timer so you don't drain the battery all night. There are also apps

    Tune-in on Android (but not in Windows) has a timer like that, and when
    I was traveling abroad and using the phone** in bed to listen to USA
    radio, I would use that.

    (Since then, I've tried to find a timer app that would turn the whole
    phone off, and for Android there are no simple ones, only one that
    requires accessibilty to be implemented and a script written that
    simulates what one does with his hands to turn the phone off. So I've
    given up on turning the phone off with a timer.)

    **Along with a VPN, since some sites won't work in some or all other countries***. I started with my laptop using Firefox's VPN, and I
    couldn't get it to work. Same problem with NordVPN, and maybe one
    other, and I was starting to wonder if I knew what I was doing. But the
    next one, ExpressVPN worked quickly and easily. I don't know why the
    first ones didn't work. They are all free for the first month and then
    13 or 15 dollars a month, and ExpressVPN comes with a free version for
    phones. So then I was able to listen to the same stations in the rental
    car.

    (All the VPNs tell you reasons to use them all the time, and if you pay
    by the year they are cheaper, but the reasons don't convince me and I
    cancel the VPN when I'm not in a foreign country.)

    And sometimes I took it with me to bed, using the timer. That included
    a problem because the phone wasn't really loud enough, and earbuds while
    asleep didn't seem to be a good idea, and also I was afraid I'd roll
    over onto the phone or knock it on the floor. But since then I've
    bought a bluetooth speaker, about the size of a very large egg, and I
    haven't used that while sleeping yet, but I use it as a better
    spearkerphone sometimes and it's great. It has a mike, and plays
    different notes when you turn it on or off. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0C9TH3H64/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title There's a bigger one too but for me, this is loud enough, and you can
    buy two if you want stereo.

    ***For that matter, for the same reason in reverse, to access some local
    sites while abroad, I would have to turn the VPN off.

    that provide restful sound tracks to aid in meditation. Combined with
    using the "do not disturb" setting on the smartphone to avoid undesired
    audio notifications, it just may do the trick. There may even be
    internet "stations" that provide wall to wall soothing music that
    wouldn't require any additional equipment. Think outside the box when
    plan A doesn't seem feasible.

    Thanks.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From micky@21:1/5 to NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com on Thu Jun 13 17:46:47 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    In alt.home.repair, on Thu, 13 Jun 2024 17:21:49 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:


    And I may even want to use it for the computer. I have a fancy audio
    program I never adjust. Maybe it has this too. but if if not, I found: >https://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/UADdbx160--universal-audio-uad-dbx-160-compressor-limiter-plug-in
    for example, Universal Audio UAD dbx 160 Compressor/Limiter Plug-in, for
    $49, through june 30th. Will it really go back up to 200 at that time.
    Only the Shadow knows.

    OTOH, here is more about the Rolls 3333b, which is hardware and costs
    $90 at several places: https://rolls.com/product/SL33 Almost all the
    reviews are positive or very positive. Do you think I can just cut
    the wires to the radio's speaker and connect it in between the
    electronics and the speaker? Easy enough to do but will it work?

    Maybe not. Another good thing about Amazon is that it lets one ask
    quesions and it accepts answers from the public. As far as I've
    noticed, none of the other vendors do, and the maker rolls.com has an
    FAQ but it's only got 5 or 10 questions and none of them were mine.

    Same product: https://www.amazon.com/rolls-SL33B-Stereo-Program-Limiter/dp/B004GK7PAI?th=1

    Q: Can this be placed in between the amp and the speakers?
    A: NO, it goes between the component producing the sound and the amp.
    By ron in the United States on October 30, 2016

    4 others also say no. What aother vendor gives the kind of service
    Amazon does. That's why it's number 1, and people should stop blaming
    other things.

    Of that doesn't mean it doesn't treat its warehouse stafff badly, and
    they'd be number 1 even if they diddn't do that, so they should stop.
    ---
    I have an amp on the same shelf next to the radio but haven't used it
    for years, and it isn't working. I'll have to find out what's wrong,
    and maybe I can use that, but it plays through 1x2 foot speakers hung on
    the opposite wall. Might fill the room with too much sound, or is that impossible? Might be unable to play it quietly. ???? Maybe I can
    connect it to little PC speakers instead.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From micky@21:1/5 to NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com on Thu Jun 13 17:21:49 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    In alt.home.repair, on Mon, 10 Jun 2024 12:44:41 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can
    be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    It appears what I want is now called sound compresion. why, Idon't
    know, but that's it. And maybe sound limiting.

    But when I search for that, I find more hits than for avc or agc. (Gain
    control was for tv and included the whole signal, including the
    picture.)

    And I may even want to use it for the computer. I have a fancy audio
    program I never adjust. Maybe it has this too. but if if not, I found: https://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/UADdbx160--universal-audio-uad-dbx-160-compressor-limiter-plug-in
    for example, Universal Audio UAD dbx 160 Compressor/Limiter Plug-in, for
    $49, through june 30th. Will it really go back up to 200 at that time.
    Only the Shadow knows.

    OTOH, here is more about the Rolls 3333b, which is hardware and costs
    $90 at several places: https://rolls.com/product/SL33 Almost all the
    reviews are positive or very positive. Do you think I can just cut
    the wires to the radio's speaker and connect it in between the
    electronics and the speaker? Easy enough to do but will it work?

    I guess I can't use white noise, because I want to listen to the news. I
    would stay up hours later to listen but I need to sleep, so I at least
    want to listen until I fall asleep.

    I could try to get CNN to turn down the volume of the commercials but
    it's really iHeart I'm listening to that suppplies the ads now, and they
    don't seem to have any way to be written to, and I doubt they would do
    it.


    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if
    I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC.
    Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same >problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement >https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From micky@21:1/5 to NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com on Fri Jun 14 11:01:04 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair

    In alt.home.repair, on Mon, 10 Jun 2024 12:44:41 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:

    Does anyone sell an add-on AVC or AGC, automatic volume control that can
    be used with an existing one-piece radio?

    The original post here was about radios, but I checked my computer. On
    the desktop computer, I'd bought an add-in sound card. I can't remember
    why I was unsatisfied with the built-in sound.

    But I have a SoundBlaster Audigy FX. The card was a few years old when
    I bought it, so there is probably newer, as well as competing brands.
    I'm sure many, most, or all have audio compression in their software.

    For this card, if one installs the included software (installation was
    not needed for the card to work), it has a Smart Volume option, which is
    sound compression. It has 3 options, Loud (which is no compression,
    maxiumum loudness), Normal (which has a slide bar and gives a wide range
    of compression, from 0 to 100% whatever that means), and Night, which
    has no slide bar and lowers volume even more for listening "at night"
    and probably in bed.

    Compression refers to compressing the range of volume, not to
    compressing data, but I don't know details.

    I had this option entirely off (the default) and didn't notice a problem
    from the station I normally play on the PC and then broadcast on FM to
    my bedroom radio. But it's on Normal now. No change noted, but if I
    were to switch to CNN sound only, which uses iHeart or Tunenin, it would probably be a big advantage.

    I looked at all this card's options when I got it, didn't think I needed
    Smnart Volume, but then forgot that I had it.




    I bought an internet radio and in some of the stations, the commercials
    are so loud they wake me up if I've fallen asleep, or near sleep, and if
    I turn down the volume, I can't hear the program. I listen to talk
    radio and in another channel, the host is loud enough but everyone else
    is much quieter, and sometimes the host gets closer to the microphone
    and it's too loud again.

    I'd like to cut the wire to the speakers, which are built into the
    radio's cabinet, and insert a device or circuit that will act as an AVC.
    Any suggestions?

    I presume that if I bought a different internet radio I'd have the same >problem, or is it possible the AVC in this one is broken?

    P.S. googling found this, Add-on: AGC and Speech Enhancement >https://www.totalrecorder.com/AddOnAGC.htm , which sounds perfect, but
    it's software, and I need hardware.

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