On Fri, 11 Oct 2002 08:30:52 -0400, Rick Glazier <[log in to unmask]> wrote: >It just becomes a question of substitution. You need to pull the drives >out and bread board them so you can pull the sound cables and >try the different sound card inputs with each drive and localize the >problem to wires, CD drives, or the sound card. >If it turns out the sound card input you just started using (if I read >this correctly) is bad or distorted, there are special mixer cords >available that join two CD-Rom drive sound outputs into one >sound card input. http://www.cyberguys.com/ and Microcenter >have them for around $10(US). > >I have sound cards with up to 3 stereo input channels, so I would >think the sound card would/(should) work "as is"... > Rick Glazier The simplest way to cure the problem is to activate one of the auxilliary inputs and connect your second CD drive to it. All you need to do is right click on the speaker icon in the system tray and select 'open volume control', this will bring up a panel with all the volume sliders that are currently active. Select 'Options, Properties' and you will be presented with a list of available controls, the ticked ones are active so go down the list to 'Auxilliary 1 or 2' and tick the box, click OK and you will see the new slider has been added to the rest. All you need to do is connect the audio lead to the appropriate connector on the sound card and set the level to get similar volume to the other channels. Hope this helps. The NOSPIN Group provides a monthly newsletter with great tips, information and ideas: NOSPIN-L, The NOSPIN Magazine Visit our web site to signup: http://freepctech.com