If your speaker sounds blown out, it is probably your speaker. The mixer or input device you are using doesn't care what sound it is producing, as long as the level of the music is not too high.
Your speaker could have blown.
Fuse could be blown, or a speaker wire loose or come off.
Your speaker has probably blown, I recommend going to a repair shop and repairing it.
It may not make any sound, it may make a small crude sound, take the speaker and smell the open part of it. if there is any burning smell then there is a high chance that you have blown your speaker. Push on the cone. If it will not move than it is not customer servicable. If it is making extra crnching noise it is blown. If it moves VERY easily there is a small chance the coil burnt itself off of the former. Also the coil could've liquified.
If it's Windows 7, you can click the speaker icon in the tray and the click the mixer bar link. You can then change the different sound levels for all programs using the sound card.
use a cable that goes from your headphone jack on the pc to the rca input on the mixer or directly to the speaker if applicable. This is just to get sound out of your pc to the mixer dj programs are a different question.
The American Audio M-52 USB Mixer/Sound Card is best for running a mixer. anonymous@oola.com
Well, it may smell, sound quieter or louder, and when it sounds louder it sounds like its sort of farting. When you take it out and push on the cone (The top piece) it should make no noise unless it is blown If it is blown it will make a crunchy crispy sound or some other sound. If it will not move than it is most likely not customer servicable.
The most common cause is bad wiring. Check the connections or replace the speaker wiring. If that does not work, check which speaker has the problem and see if a cone is blown. To do this, place your ear near the cone and gently press it in (don't push to hard). If the cone is blown you will hear a raspy rubbing sound when the cone moves. Replace the cone or the speaker if it is blown. If this does not work, change your speaker connections around to see if it is the amplifier.
When you have a mixer and a sound card, you have to record drums separately, and then incorporate them into the finished audio.
Check your guitar output your musical leads, you pedals, if applicable and your amplifier input. I, myself have never blown nor heard a blown speaker so i cant tell you for sure what happens when its blown, although you could take the amp and your guitar and all your equipment to your local music shop and ask for advice.
I would click on the sound icon at the bottom right corner, and than click on mixer if you are not on it yet. While on the mixer windows will show you which programs are using the sound device. If the browser you are currently using is there make sure the bar is set high in the level.If the mixer shows that the internet is using the sound device and its not on mute, check the material you are browsing like youtube videos, make sure they are not in mute and are not at a real low volume level.if none of that seems to work check for speaker cables to be plugged in perfectly.