![]() ![]() I generally use the right-click & drag approach to re-center a graph, after zooming and/or stretching it. Or you can simply right-click on the graph itself, somewhere away from the curve you're creating, and then drag the mouse, while holding the right mouse button down. Or click the arrows at either end of the scroll bars. You can use the scroll bars on the bottom and right hand side of the graph window. There are several ways of doing this after you zoom in. This usually seems to be the easiest approach, but you can use whatever combination of zooming and stretching you want.Ī reminder on the various different ways to move/scroll a graph after it's been either zoomed or stretched. I normally use the Zoom feature to adjust the width of the graph in the horizontal axis (frequency), and then adjust the height of the graph (amplitude) by spinning the mouse wheel over the dB values on the left hand side of the graph. So this allows them to be stretched out more. You can stretch the Graphic EQ graphs out a little bit more each time you move your cursor back over the numbered values along the edge of the graph though. ![]() It only works in small steps on the Graphic EQs though. But it can also work on any Graphic EQ graph. ![]() To stretch the graph in just one direction, hold the cursor anywhere over the frequency values that run along the bottom of the graph, or over the dB values along the left side of the graph, and spin the mouse wheel. Stretching the Graph in Just One Dimension Step 3 : Click Repair All to fix all issues. If you hold your cursor anywhere over the graph itself, and then spin the mouse wheel up or down, it will zoom the graph in or out, so it's bigger or smaller. Step 2 : Click Start Scan to find Windows registry issues that could be causing PC problems. So I think it is a problem with something changing in Windows 10. First Windows 11 update that's caused me problems.Finally figured out a way to scale the graphs in the Configuration Editor in only one dimension, to stretch them either vertically or horizontally, rather than just zooming in or out. For APO to work, you first have to run the setup to select your audio device, reboot then it should be possible to use it, but in a recent windows build, APO stopped working for me too. Again, no change.Ģ2H2 seems to have made some changes to the sound settings panel, it could just be graphical (new audio enhancements section/icon), but unless I'm being an idiot somehow, I'd also caution everyone MS might have made other changes to sound in Windows 11 that breaks Equalizer APO.įixed with uninstalling, reinstalling and then recreating my profiles. I've tried messing about with the troubleshooting options installer, where you can switch to like LFX/GFX or LFX/EFX. Sound just plays at the same level/EQ no matter what settings are configured under Configurator Editor, or the peace.txt file (I use Peace for easier headphones tweaking). But after this 22H2 update just released, and the hotfix that came out, even when APO is installed, nothing works. I know after a Windows update you have to reinstall APO with the configurator, that's not the issue, I've been doing that fine for months now.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |