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Outputing audio on mac

trueruvoice
Newcomer
Newcomer

 

Hi

Running MacPro here and trying to output audio to a different sound device.  

I have several aggregate devices that I set up for different scenarios.  The are all hosted by the same 32ch interface.  This particular set up is supposed to take audio out on ch 15-16 but instead, It keeps playing it on channels 1 & 2.    Is it because Zoom does not recognize aggregate devices?  It plays it on first two channels of the default interface even though in preferences is chosen an aggregate device.

 

I hope you understand what am saying 🙂

 

Any ideas?

 

Thanks 🙂

 

 

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Jameswalter
Contributor III
Contributor III

To output audio on your Mac in Zoom, you can follow these steps:

  1. Launch the Zoom app: Open the Zoom application on your Mac.

  2. Join or start a meeting: Join an existing meeting or start a new meeting by clicking on the appropriate options within the Zoom app.

  3. Click on the "Join Audio" button: Once you are in the meeting, you will see a toolbar at the bottom of the screen. Locate the "Join Audio" button and click on it.

  4. Select audio output: A pop-up window will appear with audio options. In the "Audio Output" section, choose the desired output device from the dropdown menu. The available options will depend on the audio devices connected to your Mac, such as built-in speakers, headphones, or external speakers.

Regards,
James

View solution in original post

5 REPLIES 5

Jameswalter
Contributor III
Contributor III

To output audio on your Mac in Zoom, you can follow these steps:

  1. Launch the Zoom app: Open the Zoom application on your Mac.

  2. Join or start a meeting: Join an existing meeting or start a new meeting by clicking on the appropriate options within the Zoom app.

  3. Click on the "Join Audio" button: Once you are in the meeting, you will see a toolbar at the bottom of the screen. Locate the "Join Audio" button and click on it.

  4. Select audio output: A pop-up window will appear with audio options. In the "Audio Output" section, choose the desired output device from the dropdown menu. The available options will depend on the audio devices connected to your Mac, such as built-in speakers, headphones, or external speakers.

Regards,
James

@trueruvoice I am having the same issue. I have a mixer that presents an USB audio device to the mac computer with 4 channels output. When selecting the device in Zoom there is no options to output on channels 3/4, zoom only outputs on channels 1/2 which the mixer is not listening on. I wish zoom would fix this for mac. It seems to work fine for windows computers.

 

 

 

Having the exact same problem. I stumbled into a workaround — it works, but requires a third party app...

 

1. Install SoundSource (from Rogue Amoeba — an OS level audio router app). Add Zoom as an application that you want to redirect audio from. Have it redirect to the device that's not working — in my case, a Mackie ProFX10 with USB interface (but that uses Outputs 3 and 4, not 1 and 2).

 

2. Go into Audio MIDI Setup (in your Utilities folder). Open the Audio Devices window. Click the plus (+) icon in the lower left, and select Create a Multi-Output device. Add your non-functioning output as the only device. I named mine "zoom workaround".

 

3. Go back into Zoom audio settings. Choose "zoom workaround" (or the like) as your audio output. 

 

There's some funny interaction between Multi-Output device settings and SoundSource that fixes things. I really assumed SoundSource should be able to fix it alone, but I can't consistently reproduce it. 

Thank you chadtee for this solution!!

This SoundSource worked for me as well, and solved the issue of Zoom only routing to USB 1/2.  However I didn't need to create a multifunction device.

My setup: I have zoom set to my mac speakers/mic, and then I have SoundSource redirect the output to PFX (Mackie ProFX12v3).   That's basically the same thing as chadtee, however instead of creating the multifunction device, I changed the PFX profile's Speaker Configuration to be channels 3 and 4, and this worked just as well.  I can now send Zoom out on usb channels 3/4 to the last channel of the mixer - just like the ProFX10v3.  

I have had another issue with the ProFX10 when I run Hybrid meetings.  For me, these meetings are a room full of people (50+) where there is a presentation being done live, but this is also a zoom meeting, and the online attendees need to ask questions and interact with the live event.  The live event needs to send the zoom audio to the PA speakers along with the presenters, and the microphones from the live presenters need to not only go through the pa speakers, but back into the zoom meeting as well.   I imagine this sounds like a standard scenario to you all like just as it does to me.  However the problem with the ProFX10v3 (and seems to be the case with many mixers) is that the USB 3/4 does a pass-through to the main mix automatically, and it therefore is sent back to the zoom meeting, which causes echos for everyone in the meeting.  I can solve the problem with older v1 Mackie's, as they have a "USB Thru" button, which will prevent that loopback.  Or, I can utilize the subgroup on the ProFX12v3.  This mixer allows routing to this subgroup and/or the main mix.  Since the main mix is what is sent to the mac over USB, I can disengage LR on that last USB 3/4 mixer channel so that it only sends signal to the subgroup, but not the LR main mix (and therefore not back to my mac).  The live microphones will however go to both the main mix and the sub 1/2.  Now, instead of connecting my PA speakers to the MAIN Outs on the Mackie, I connect them to the Sub outs 1/2. 

It's a messy setup, because I also have to use the SoundSource app to reroute Zoom to usb 3/4, in combination with the non-standard PA connections.   

I wish Mackie would add that USB-Thru button back to their mixers for the second problem, and that Zoom would create a more flexible interface to the mac audio for the first.

Anyway, the ProFX12v3 is about $350, and that's the cheapest option I've found.   Other mixers - Possibly the ONYX 12 (which needs the same runaround) would be more universally useful because it can record onboard, or the Soundcraft Signature MTK units, which have more USB flexibility, would be an alternative, but they're a few hundred more bucks.

I hope I explained that clear enough... and that it helps someone down the road.

jrubinmd
Newcomer
Newcomer

Worked for me: Mac Studio/ UA Apollo 6