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Speaker and mic placement is key. your mic is picking up the sound from the speakers. When using the mic don't stand directly in front of the speaker. If that doesn't help you may want to invest in a different mic (compressor mics are great at only picking up sounds close to it).
The control supposedly controls the mix of the echo... this is a reverb type sound. Please note that room acoustics AND if the mic's "hear" the speaker in this, it may create an echo that is NOT under control of the adjustment. Make sure the mic's cannot "hear" the speaker or a reflection off a wall.
Sometimes the echo is produced by the MIC, if you have a Mic mute it, or make it far from the sound source, or disable the MIC boost function on the recording device on the multimedia panel.
Echo is caused by a number of variables. Are you in a large room with mic extended away from you? Mic too far away will create echo. Also try turning down the gain for the mic
This is a classic indication of a lost shield or ground connection in the mic circuitry. Double check these connections for good contact in the mic *and* the plug at the other end of the cable.
Check the grounding and SWR or "match"of the antenna system, too. A poor SWR (greater than 1.5:1 or 2.0:1) can cause the reflection of RF back to the radio. Modifications can increase sensitivity of the mic to this unwanted RF.
When you say echo, are you meaning sound coming from your mic echoing thru the speakers or a sound like your in a bathroom on all audio.
If you are referring to the mic issue, then open your volume control and make sure that MIC is muted in playback setttings
If you are refering to bathroom sound on everything , it is called a "environmental setting" and in in your sound cards software setup, like their version of the volume control or some other application they have installed for you to configure your card. Just locate the "environmental" setting and disable it / set it to none.
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