Sapd/HeadsetControl

Very quiet sidetone with Logitech G PRO X

Closed this issue · 1 comments

Description

It's hard to say when it happened, but it used to be different on some earlier version of Ubuntu, with PulseAudio instead of PipeWire, and with some earlier version of headsetcontrol. So I have no idea which component is responsible, but I figured this issue tracker is the most reasonable place to get started.

It used to be the case that with headsetcontrol -s 128 the feedback got quite loud - I'd hear my breathing, rubbing of the chord against my shirt, etc. Of course, the voice would come out of the headphones louder than what I'd hear without the headphones
Now with the the same command I get barely any feedback. There's still a difference between 128 and 0, of course, but almost insignificant.

How should I approach debugging and, hopefully, fixing it so that 128 is again the "almost too loud to be useful" level?

Headset Name

Logitech G PRO X

On which OS does the problem happen?

Linux

Device information

Detailed Device Information
Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xc Usageid: 0x1

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xc Usageid: 0x36

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xb Usageid: 0x5

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xff99 Usageid: 0x1

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xff99 Usageid: 0xff00

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xff99 Usageid: 0x20

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xff99 Usageid: 0x24

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xff99 Usageid: 0x48

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xff99 Usageid: 0x2b

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xff99 Usageid: 0xff17

Device Found
 VendorID: 0x046d
ProductID: 0x0aaa
 path: /dev/hidraw5
 serial_number: 000000000000
 Manufacturer: Logitech
 Product:      PRO X
 Interface:    3
 Usage-Page: 0xff43 Usageid: 0x202

LMAO, my bad - apparently, the friction over my t-shirt has been gradually turning the volume control and I've been compensating by increasing the output volume in my OS.