![]() Perhaps the folks on the Desktop board can offer some assistance. But because it is a Desktop I don't know what is normal for it. If it did then I would advise to install the Realtek. Restart, then "update" the High Definition Audio Device and see if the bang goes away. If you had a laptop I would advise you to remove the Realtek driver from Device Manager by right clicking on it, then uninstall and put a check in the box to delete the driver software. High Definition Audio would be the native audio driver and would only be installed in the absence of a Realtek audio driver. If it were a laptop, it would not be normal to see both High Definition Audio Device and Realtek High Definition Audio in the Device Manager at the same time. This executable driver installation file includes drivers for 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows 7 and Windows Vista. This is a link to the Desktop Audio discussion board. This is the latest driver for system using Realteks high definition audio chipsets. ![]() ![]() Don't know if it would matter on a desktop. On the laptops sometimes it is important to install it before the audio driver because it helps the OS identify the audio. This is the model's Intel Chipset driver. The only Win7 audio driver Dell supplied for the Inspiron 3847 was the four year old Realtek 6.0.1.700.
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