I am preparing for a streamed music show via ZOOM on May 17. I have connected a mic & guitar pre-amp to my 2011 Macbook Pro audio line input port. In the AUDIO SETTINGS I have selected that input rather than the internal microphone, and I show signal coming in from both the mic and my guitar. I have the OUTPUT set to headphones, but I cannot hear the mic/guitar input signal through the headphones. I tested an MP3 on my Macbook–and it sounded good through the headphone. Is there a second setting to get the line-in signal to come out via the headphone out?
Macbook 2011 Audio Input/Output Question
audioheadphonesmacbook promicrophone
Related Solutions
That TRRS socket actually has of odd configuration of 4 pins so that you can use the genuine Apple headphone/microphone all-in-one 4-pin combo that comes with iPods & iPhones etc. Generally they look like this:
Here is your microphone, right? The Sennheiser ME3. Notice there is a locking ring on that plug? Also, notice how there are two little black lines on the end there? That is the insulation separating the 3 conductive contacts aka 3 pins This is a TRS plug: ( - )( + )(⏚).
It comes with the following caveats:
1. The plug on your microphone has a rotating "locking ring", you have probably found that the microphone isn't working, or works only sporadically depending on the connection. The issue is that locking ring prevents the non-standard plug from fully engaging when plugging into your sound card.
2. Please note that all versions of the Sennheiser ME3 are wired differently than usual headset microphones and are not electrically compatible with many computer sound cards.
First of all, you're probably going to need something like this:
3. Additional Note: This adapter does not change the unusual wiring scheme used by Sennheiser in the manufacture of the ME3. The ME3 is not compatible with all sound cards. If you are having trouble, we recommend you interface your ME3 with an external USB sound adapter, such as the Andrea Pure Audio (MA) adapter, Buddy 7G or the SpeechWare MultiAdapter.
I don't know what's up with the strange wiring scheme. Maybe it's a stereo microphone, maybe it has something to do with their noise cancellation feature, maybe they use some weird shielding in their cable, maybe they're using balanced cables, maybe they just decided to use an odd wiring scheme and call it a proprietary connector, preventing people from using aftermarket accessories, maybe it was an accident. I can only speculate without digging deeper or seeing a schematic or something. If it were me, I would probably cut the plug off and wire it in a traditional manner. Apparently though, these are compatible with the Sennheiser ME3. They are known as The Andrea Pure Audio USB-SA Adapter & The Andrea Pure Audio USB-MA Adapter, respectively.
If by some miracle you have an ordinary connector, or you find a suitable line-level adapter to make things "normal", you're probably still going to want one of these;
1/8" TRRS male to 1/8" TS female input & 1/8" TRS female adapters:
Yes, it looks and sounds weird. The 4-conductor TRRS plug on this cable uses the CTIA standard configuration, which puts the microphone signal on the sleeve (versus being on the second ring in the OMTP standard). The CTIA standard has always been used by Apple and HTC, while older Samsung, Nokia & Sony Ericsson devices (for instance) initially used the OMTP standard.
Plug the 3.5mm (1/8") male TRRS plug into the audio jack on your laptop. The smaller of the two 3.5mm (1/8") female jack bodies is the TRS stereo headphone output. Plug your standard earphones, headphones, speakers, or other output device into this jack. The larger of the two 3.5mm (1/8") female jack bodies is the TS mono microphone input. Plug your (hopefully, now) "standard PC style microphone cable" into this jack.
The splitter in your photo has a TRRS jack, which is often called "4-pole" or "4 position" because of its 4 metal sections separated by 3 bands.
TRRS enables both stereo output as well as microphone input. (Earbuds from iPhone 6 use this type of jack.)
Your MacBook Air (although I'm not familiar with yours in particular) probably has a TRRS port (rather than one port for microphone and a separate port for headphones). So you could plug iPhone earbuds (which have a mic) into that port.
The lavalier mic shown in your photo appears to have a TRRS jack and so would probably work with your MacBook Air without even using an adapter.
However, you said that you own a different one and that yours has only "one ring".
I would agree with your assumption that plugging a 1-pole mic jack into that adapter and plugging the adapter into your MacBook Air should work.
Many people online are reporting problems with this MacBook Air port, however.
See my unanswered question here: External mic not working anymore on Macbook Air
By clicking the links mentioned in my question and comments, you might stumble onto some hacks relating to:
- Putting your computer to sleep after plugging your mic in
- The order in which you plug your mic into your adapter and your adapter into your laptop
- Whether and when to plug headphones into the adapter
- and more
I have not yet found a reliable repeatable solution but wanted to share what I've come across so far, and I hope it helps you (and others).
Best Answer
On my iMac (21.5-inch, Mid 2011), I have to open QuickTime Player and select
File->New Auto Recording
from the menu bar. This will produce the Auto Recording window shown below.You should make sure you have
Line In
selected, as shown below.You should also set the Output volume and the Line in Input volume in the Sound pane of System Preferences, as shown below.
Also, you should also set the Headphones Balance in the Sound pane of System Preferences, as shown below.
You should be able to hear the sound from the input jack. You should be able to do this without actually recording the sound.
The version of macOS was High Sierra 10.13.6.