Laptop cracking noise

How to Fix Crackling or Popping Sound on a Windows PC

Crackling, popping, and other sound problems can occur for a variety of reasons.You may be able to fix the problem by adjusting your audio device settings, updating your sound driver, or pinning down another hardware device thats interfering. Here are some things to try.

Before you start messing with settings, its worth checking your hardware itself. If a cable connection is loose, this could cause some sound problems. Ensure all your audio cables are connected securely. If the problem persists, here are a few potential solutions.

Change Your AudioFormat

Changing the audio quality on your output device can solve some problems. To check your audio quality, right-click the speaker icon in the notification area next to your clock and select Playback Devices.

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Double-click the default playback device, which has a green checkmark on its icon.

Click the Advanced tab and use the Default Format box to select your sound quality level. Try settingyour audio quality to 16 bit, 44100 Hz (CD Quality). Click OK afterwards and see if the crackling or other audio problems continue. This change can fix some audio problems.

If its set to CD quality and you experience problems, try changing to another audio format level and see what happens.

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Disable Audio Enhancements

Some sound drivers use software enhancements in an attempt to improve your sound quality. If these arent working properlyor if your CPU is being taxed too heavilythese could result in sound problems.

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To disable sound enhancements,use the same Properties window. Click the Enhancements tab hereif you see oneand check the Disable All Enhancements checkbox. Click OK to save your changes and then test to see if the problems continue.

Not all software drivers perform this function, so you wont always see the Enhancements tab on all systems. There may be a similar tab herelike one named Sound Blasterwhere youll find similar effects to disable. There may be no option to disable enhancements at all. It depends on your sound hardware and drivers.

Disable Exclusive Mode

Some sound drivers seem to have issue with the Exclusive Mode option that allows applications to take exclusive control of your sound card. This shouldnt normally be a problem: Blame bad sound drivers if its causing issues on your system.

Youll find this setting on the same window where the Default Format option is. Disable the Allow applications to take exclusive control of this device option under Exclusive Mode. Click OK and see if this solved your problem.

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This option normally isnt a problem, so you should probably re-enable it if disabling it doesnt solve the problem.

Update Your Sound Drivers

Some problems may be fixed in newer sound drivers. If youre using older sound drivers, you may need to update them to fix various bugs. Windows 10 automatically attempts to keep your drivers up to date, but even then itmay not always offer the latest sound drivers.

To getnewer sound drivers, visit your computer manufacturers website, find the driver download page for your model of PC, and download the latest sound drivers available. If you built your own PC, check the driver download page for your motherboard manufactureror your sound card manufacturer, if you use a separate sound card instead of your motherboards onboard sound.

Check Your DPC Latency

This problem may also be caused by DPC latency. DPC stands for Deferred Procedure Call. This is the part of Windows that handles hardware drivers. If a driver takes too long to do something, it can prevent other driverslike your sound driverfrom doing the work they need to do in a timely fashion. This can lead to audio problems like clicks, pops, dropouts, and other issues.

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To check your DPC latency, download and run LatencyMon. Click the Start button and let it run in the background for a while. It will monitor your systems hardware drivers and provide recommendations, informing you which hardware driver seems to be the problem. If a particular hardware driver is causing problems, you can try updating the devices driver, disabling the device, removing it from your system, or replacing it.

Even if you see some latency issues here, they arent necessarily a problem on a typical PC where you just need to listen to music, watch videos, and play video games.If the tool warns you about a problem but you cant hear one, you dont need to disable any hardware. This is more important for professional use cases where you really do need real-time audio. But, if you do hear a problem, the tool might indicate a hardware driver at fault.

Chris Hoffman
Chris Hoffman is Editor-in-Chief of How-To Geek. He's written about technology for over a decade and was a PCWorld columnist for two years. Chris has written for The New York Times, been interviewed as a technology expert on TV stations like Miami's NBC 6, and had his work covered by news outlets like the BBC. Since 2011, Chris has written over 2,000 articles that have been read nearly one billion times---and that's just here at How-To Geek. Read Full Bio »