Malor wrote: ↑Wed Feb 01, 2023 11:25 pm
That sounds like an electrical problem, like something is wrong with the analog board. You might want to contact your seller for support.
A way around the problem, assuming that the soundbar can take a Toslink input, would be to run a Mini-toslink to Toslink adapter, making sure it's fiber only, no copper. Digital sound on the Mister is much better than analog anyway, so you'll get better reproduction.
But that's hiding what sounds like an underlying problem, instead of fixing it.
This is a strange one!
Building on the toslink suggestion, I had another idea to work around this problem, since, to my knowledge, those early Dell soundbars do not have digital inputs, only analog 3.5mm stereo input.
You could obtain digital audio from a supported I/O board (or using a device to extract from the HDMI signal before the DVI conversion) and pass it through a cheap (~$15) DAC and out to the sound bar. This should isolate any analog circuitry out of the MiSTer and still get you audio.
Example: https://www.amazon.com/Digital-Converte ... 09ZHPX2BR/
Note, some HDMI extractors will do this deed as well.
https://www.amazon.com/Flashmen-Extract ... 09JNR9D6H/
You would use a standard HDMI cable to one of these devices, use its analog audio output to feed into your soundbar, and then connect your hdmi to dvi connector to on the output of the extractor.
One other thing to check/ask... How is the soundbar powered? Some of these speakers can be powered from the monitor directly, some can be powered by a separate 12v supply. Have your tried both wiring configurations?