Try swapping the speakers around if the problem still persists either the speaker is faulty or
the speakers plug/outlet is usually at the back of the computer you will have to open up the
computer to check the lead attached to the rear of the input plug make sure the connection is good
or you might have to clean the dust from your computer dust causes static which causes your computer to overheat and all sorts of problems
be sure to wear an anti static earth strap before touching anything inside your computer
try cleaning your computer of dust using a fine air blower from a compressor making VERY sure that there is no MOISTURE in the air line specifically around the CPU central processing unit and your SOUND CARD dust causes static to build up in a computer causing it to overheat any many other problems:
hope this helps you
have you tried this control panel sounds and audio,volume,advanced,speakers select the appropriate speakers from the drop down list or navigate to the device manager scroll to system devices + to expand,system speaker right click properties then select use this device (enable)
hope this helps
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Brian,
Thanks for your suggestion. Here's the situation: this is a 2 speaker system w/subwoofer. I think the speakers are fine. There is one plug for both speakers into the subwoofer (which plugs into sound card). I will try plugging speakers directly into soundcard and by pass sub. I tried this last night on my laptop. While the sound was unamplified there was equal volumn from both. When they come out of sub the left speaker has no sound. My thinking is if this is the case bypassing sub then the problem is in the subwoofer. I think I can take the sub apart and check connections there. Not sure what I am looking for inside. This system only about 2 months old, never play loud so can't imagine anything is toast, hope just bad wire or something simple. I'll let you know what I find.
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