Okay, so this is frustrating me to no end. I got a new PC, a Lenovo Legion Tower 5i (there are multiple models with that exact name, so I'll post my exact specs at the end of this post) on April 26th, 2022, and on around May 10th or May 11th, the audio on my computer started popping randomly whenever I was doing things like watching YouTube. On a lot of other places I've asked, a lot of people have suggested power saving features, as it can cause audio to pop at the beginning of audio playing, but I can assure that is NOT the issue, as the audio pop and crackle happens randomly during audio, and not just at the start or end. It even happens during audio playing even if I'm not touching the mouse and keyboard. I have tried absolutely everything that I can think of, as well as everything that was suggested to me. I am decently savvy with fiddling around with settings and troubleshooting software, but I am an absolute lost cause when it comes to hardware. I should also mention that I have tried two pairs of headphones and a pair of speakers, all of which have no issues on other devices. I also tried routing them through the front headphone jack, USB ports, and the rear audio jack, ALL of which have the crackling and popping issues on desktop.
But here's the really screwy thing: The audio issues don't seem to happen in games, at least not NEARLY as much. And sometimes, whenever I exit a game, the audio on my computer gets MUCH worse. Like, instead of being an occasional pop and crackle, it turns into such a crackly mess that you really can't even hear anything besides the crackle. BUT if after the desktop audio gets that bad, and you go into a game again, the audio is basically normal in the game. But once it gets to be a super crackly mess on the desktop, the only way to reset back to its normal amount of crackling and popping is to reboot the entire computer.
Now, I should point out that I am an avid Linux user (specifically Debian-based operating systems, like Ubuntu, and Linux Mint) so, I thought that maybe my PC just somehow wasn't very compatiable with Linux? But I installed Windows 11 again (which is what the PC came with) and it was even happening on there. But something else I noticed is that on Linux, you can choose what GPU drivers to use, either proprietary Nvidia, or the open-source Nouveau drivers (which are fine for internet browsing, but the open source drivers run even the simplest games at about 2 FPS), and it seems that when I used the open-source drivers, the desktop audio was fine and seemingly had no crackling or popping whatsoever. So with that in mind, I guess it has something to do with the graphics card? Does the graphics card even handle sound? Anyways, that's where I start to get lost, and that's why I'm making this post. I really hope somebody can help me with this as I'm just at a loss at this point. Anyways, I'll go ahead and post the specs that I know of for now. If you need more, don't hesitate to ask.
CPU: 11th gen Intel Core i7-11700 at 2.50GHz x 8
GPU: GTX 1660 Super (It's not any specific popular brand like EVGA or MSI, since it appears to be an exclusive model made by Lenovo for the Legion series of PCs they produce)
RAM: 16GB
Hopefully that's enough information to at least get people started. Thank you all so much who take the time to read this.
But here's the really screwy thing: The audio issues don't seem to happen in games, at least not NEARLY as much. And sometimes, whenever I exit a game, the audio on my computer gets MUCH worse. Like, instead of being an occasional pop and crackle, it turns into such a crackly mess that you really can't even hear anything besides the crackle. BUT if after the desktop audio gets that bad, and you go into a game again, the audio is basically normal in the game. But once it gets to be a super crackly mess on the desktop, the only way to reset back to its normal amount of crackling and popping is to reboot the entire computer.
Now, I should point out that I am an avid Linux user (specifically Debian-based operating systems, like Ubuntu, and Linux Mint) so, I thought that maybe my PC just somehow wasn't very compatiable with Linux? But I installed Windows 11 again (which is what the PC came with) and it was even happening on there. But something else I noticed is that on Linux, you can choose what GPU drivers to use, either proprietary Nvidia, or the open-source Nouveau drivers (which are fine for internet browsing, but the open source drivers run even the simplest games at about 2 FPS), and it seems that when I used the open-source drivers, the desktop audio was fine and seemingly had no crackling or popping whatsoever. So with that in mind, I guess it has something to do with the graphics card? Does the graphics card even handle sound? Anyways, that's where I start to get lost, and that's why I'm making this post. I really hope somebody can help me with this as I'm just at a loss at this point. Anyways, I'll go ahead and post the specs that I know of for now. If you need more, don't hesitate to ask.
CPU: 11th gen Intel Core i7-11700 at 2.50GHz x 8
GPU: GTX 1660 Super (It's not any specific popular brand like EVGA or MSI, since it appears to be an exclusive model made by Lenovo for the Legion series of PCs they produce)
RAM: 16GB
Hopefully that's enough information to at least get people started. Thank you all so much who take the time to read this.