Recently, the built-in microphone stopped working. The computer still correctly detects the input, which shows up in Settings as Microphone Array (Synaptics Audio), however no sound is detected when I talk. When I plug in headphones into the audio jack, the same thing happens: the computer correctly detects the external microphone as External Microphone (Synaptics Audio), but again no sound is detected when I talk.

In Device Manager, I uninstalled the Synaptics Audio driver as well as the Microphone Array audio input and then scanned for new hardware. The devices were detected and installed, but the problem did not resolve itself.


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I then tried pretty much every combination of uninstalling drivers, restarting, then reinstalling drivers, etc., and none fixed the problem. As far as I can tell, the drivers are correct or the devices are being detected incorrectly, and thus Windows is installing the improper drivers.

As far as I can remember, I believe the microphone stopped working after the 2020-04 Cumulative update. I tried uninstalling that update and then restarting my computer, but that did not fix the problem, so I then reinstalled it.

I then decided to try connecting a Bluetooth headset, and the microphone works using the Bluetooth headset. After disconnecting the Bluetooth headset, the built-in microphone still does not detect any input.

So far, I had been looking in Settings to see if any audio was being detected. I then tried opening Voice Recorder (which has permission to access my microphone), and strangely, it reports, To get started, connect a microphone. The same thing happens when I plug in my headphones (which have a built-in mic) even though Settings does detect an External Microphone.

I'm at a loss as to how to resolve this. I assume that completely reinstalling Windows would likely fix the problem, but I'd rather not go to that extreme, as it would be a pain to set everything up again. I still tend to think the issue is with the driver as the same driver is used for both the built-in microphone and the wired microphone, but the Bluetooth headset uses a different driver and works. I find it very interesting that Voice Recorder doesn't even detect the microphone, which makes me think the built-in microphone is misconfigured.

Has anyone else had this issue and resolved it or noticed something is misconfigured? I attached screenshots, so hopefully, someone will notice if something looks wrong. Additionally, if someone else has a Lenovo Flex and would be able to verify that the drivers I have installed are correct, that would be great.

I had this issue with my flex 14, too. I did all the steps you did as well. It was very frustrating. I finally played around in Zoom and discovered that when Zoom updated in October it added an advanced feature under the audio setting. "Signal processing by Windows audio device drivers" was on auto. I turned it off and now I can use the internal microphone with Zoom without any issues. I have no idea what all this means, but it worked! -us/articles/360050581052-New-updates-for-October-26-2020

* I used pavucontrol to check if everything was alright. It is not muted but the meter doesn't bounce when I'm trying to use it. Actually, it constantly bounces slightly, regardless of whether there is some sound or not.

Edit: I fixed the bouncing problem by following this suggestion, but the microphone still doesn't work.

Testing with arecord -d 5 /tmp/test.wav[ / aplay /tmp/test.wav, I get absolutely no sound. Perhaps I should mention that the image of my hard disk has been copied from an Acer Aspire laptop through Clonezilla, so maybe I need to make some more adjustments, at least as far as the microphone is concerned. I just don't know what else to do about this.

Got exactly the same issue with 2 different Lenovo laptops. I don't use PulseAudio - just pure alsa. The issue was not "no sound at all from internal microphone" but "extremely quiet and noisy sound with internal microphone". The solution was quite easy: mute right internal microphone channel and digital input channel (lower to 0). Not if digital input is really needed - you can omit it. Seems that Lenovo internal microphone is detected as stereo, but works as one channel only.

Try muting not with pavcontrol but with alsamixer instead.

Finally Solved: After I knew the problem was due to PulseAudio not Alsa I went to the PulseAudio Troubleshooting page and I was amazed, they had a section on static noise, even mentioning my laptop name and model, also a section on microphone distortion. So I followed the instructions and it's now fixed.

As of tonight the built in microphone on my y540 has stopped working properly. The sound it picks up results in a muffled voice that sounds far away and and with slight static. Things i've done so far to try and fix-Checked for obstruction in front face microphone holes, checked decibel levels,checked default mic options, updated to latest driver, updated bios, updated windows 10, restarted pc multiple times, adjusted various audio levels. So far nothing has worked. No i have not dropped it, spilled anything on it etc. Is this a hardware issue?, If so please let me know those of you experiencing the same issue with the y540 thanks! May have to return it or something idk, i do have an external mic i can always use but its nice to have the built in one as well.

Barring potential hardware issues, the most likely reason is that your external mic doesn't have the necessary permissions. Connect the microphone, then go into your Thinkpad's settings and check to see if it has access, and allow it to connect if necessary.

The internal microphone of my new Lenovo Thinkpad T460 is not working. Under Sound Preferences I can only choose from Monitor of Built-in Audio Analog Stero and there is no input level recognized. Does anyone know what I can do about it?

If you're having trouble hearing others in your Teams calls and meetings, the problem is either with your speaker not working, or with your microphone. If other participants can hear each other well, the problem is most likely with your microphone.

We have several models of Lenovo Business Laptops (P, L, and T Series) with webcams that keep randomly disconnecting and become unavailable during Teams calls. Is anyone else having this issue? We've tried completely uninstalling and reinstalling the webcams including forcefully removing drivers. We've tried firmware updates, windows updates and different drivers as well.

@Patrick Leavy - Virtual FD The following Lenovo driver patch resolved this issue for us. -and-netbooks/thinkpad-t-series-laptops/thinkpad-t14s-gen-3-type-21cq-21cr/downloads/ds555195-lenovo-view-driver-for-windows-11-version-21h2-or-later-10-version-20h2-or-later-thinkpad-x1-carbon-gen-10-x1-yoga-gen-7

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