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Barricade

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  1. @Toasted Thanks man, your suggestion worked for me, for some reason even though my in app volume in Music Bee was maxed the volume in Volume Mixer was way down.
  2. Hi All, So I recently started getting this issue with my beloved VOID Wireless Gaming Headset and it progressively got worse. But I have found a permanent fix for it and can now listen to multimedia without constant audio popping or cracking that was driving me insane. The issue isn't actually with the product but the default driver Windows 10 installs when you insert the dongle into a USB port for the first time and becuase iCUE sees the driver already installed it uses that faulty one instead of the correct Corsair OEM Driver. (Since the Creative Update Windows has been handling drivers differently.) To stop this from happening and install the Corsair Void Headset without this issue, do the following: 1. Uninstall iCUE from Programs and Features and reboot. Now windows will automatically pick up the device again and reinstall the driver. Do the folllowing to remove the device again and stop it from reinstalling (if any other devices give you issues in future just renable this afterwards): 2. Go to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container". 3. Right click and uninstall all devices under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container and make sure to tick the option "Delete Device Drivers". 4. Search under Control Panel "Hardware" then select the underlined "Change Device Driver Installation Settings". -> Change the option "Automatically Download Drivers..." to "No" or "Never" (if any other devices give you issues in future just re-enable this afterwards). 5. If the device is still visable under "Devices" in the WIndows 10 Settings App Remove it there too. 6. Unplug the Dongle from the Computer and Reboot. 7. Install the latest version of iCUE with the Dongle unplugged and Reboot. 8. Insert the Dongle, iCUE will auto-start and say "No Device Detected" then Windows will install the wrong default driver. 9. Go back to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container" and uninstall all drivers under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container again. 10. iCUE Will now auto-detect your device again and reinstall the correct driver. This fixed my issue and I really hope that this tutorial will help some of you guys with the same issue. Let me know if it worked for you too. Happy listening.
  3. Hi All, So I recently started getting this issue with my beloved VOID Wireless Gaming Headset and it progressively got worse. But I have found a permanent fix for it and can now listen to multimedia without constant audio popping or cracking that was driving me insane. The issue isn't actually with the product but the default driver Windows 10 installs when you insert the dongle into a USB port for the first time and becuase iCUE sees the driver already installed it uses that faulty one instead of the correct Corsair OEM Driver. (Since the Creative Update Windows has been handling drivers differently.) To stop this from happening and install the Corsair Void Headset without this issue, do the following: 1. Uninstall iCUE from Programs and Features and reboot. Now windows will automatically pick up the device again and reinstall the driver. Do the folllowing to remove the device again and stop it from reinstalling (if any other devices give you issues in future just renable this afterwards): 2. Go to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container". 3. Right click and uninstall all devices under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container and make sure to tick the option "Delete Device Drivers". 4. Search under Control Panel "Hardware" then select the underlined "Change Device Driver Installation Settings". -> Change the option "Automatically Download Drivers..." to "No" or "Never" (if any other devices give you issues in future just re-enable this afterwards). 5. If the device is still visable under "Devices" in the WIndows 10 Settings App Remove it there too. 6. Unplug the Dongle from the Computer and Reboot. 7. Install the latest version of iCUE with the Dongle unplugged and Reboot. 8. Insert the Dongle, iCUE will auto-start and say "No Device Detected" then Windows will install the wrong default driver. 9. Go back to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container" and uninstall all drivers under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container again. 10. iCUE Will now auto-detect your device again and reinstall the correct driver. This fixed my issue and I really hope that this tutorial will help some of you guys with the same issue. Let me know if it worked for you too. Happy listening.
  4. Hi All, So I recently started getting this issue with my beloved VOID Wireless Gaming Headset and it progressively got worse. But I have found a permanent fix for it and can now listen to multimedia without constant audio popping or cracking that was driving me insane. The issue isn't actually with the product but the default driver Windows 10 installs when you insert the dongle into a USB port for the first time and becuase iCUE sees the driver already installed it uses that faulty one instead of the correct Corsair OEM Driver. (Since the Creative Update Windows has been handling drivers differently.) To stop this from happening and install the Corsair Void Headset without this issue, do the following: 1. Uninstall iCUE from Programs and Features and reboot. Now windows will automatically pick up the device again and reinstall the driver. Do the folllowing to remove the device again and stop it from reinstalling (if any other devices give you issues in future just renable this afterwards): 2. Go to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container". 3. Right click and uninstall all devices under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container and make sure to tick the option "Delete Device Drivers". 4. Search under Control Panel "Hardware" then select the underlined "Change Device Driver Installation Settings". -> Change the option "Automatically Download Drivers..." to "No" or "Never" (if any other devices give you issues in future just re-enable this afterwards). 5. If the device is still visable under "Devices" in the WIndows 10 Settings App Remove it there too. 6. Unplug the Dongle from the Computer and Reboot. 7. Install the latest version of iCUE with the Dongle unplugged and Reboot. 8. Insert the Dongle, iCUE will auto-start and say "No Device Detected" then Windows will install the wrong default driver. 9. Go back to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container" and uninstall all drivers under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container again. 10. iCUE Will now auto-detect your device again and reinstall the correct driver. This fixed my issue and I really hope that this tutorial will help some of you guys with the same issue. Let me know if it worked for you too. Happy listening.
  5. Hi All, So I recently started getting this issue with my beloved VOID Wireless Gaming Headset and it progressively got worse. But I have found a permanent fix for it and can now listen to multimedia without constant audio popping or cracking that was driving me insane. The issue isn't actually with the product but the default driver Windows 10 installs when you insert the dongle into a USB port for the first time and becuase iCUE sees the driver already installed it uses that faulty one instead of the correct Corsair OEM Driver. (Since the Creative Update Windows has been handling drivers differently.) To stop this from happening and install the Corsair Void Headset without this issue, do the following: 1. Uninstall iCUE from Programs and Features and reboot. Now windows will automatically pick up the device again and reinstall the driver. Do the folllowing to remove the device again and stop it from reinstalling (if any other devices give you issues in future just renable this afterwards): 2. Go to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container". 3. Right click and uninstall all devices under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container and make sure to tick the option "Delete Device Drivers". 4. Search under Control Panel "Hardware" then select the underlined "Change Device Driver Installation Settings". -> Change the option "Automatically Download Drivers..." to "No" or "Never" (if any other devices give you issues in future just re-enable this afterwards). 5. If the device is still visable under "Devices" in the WIndows 10 Settings App Remove it there too. 6. Unplug the Dongle from the Computer and Reboot. 7. Install the latest version of iCUE with the Dongle unplugged and Reboot. 8. Insert the Dongle, iCUE will auto-start and say "No Device Detected" then Windows will install the wrong default driver. 9. Go back to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container" and uninstall all drivers under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container again. 10. iCUE Will now auto-detect your device again and reinstall the correct driver. This fixed my issue and I really hope that this tutorial will help some of you guys with the same issue. Let me know if it worked for you too. Happy listening.
  6. Hi All, So I recently started getting this issue with my beloved VOID Wireless Gaming Headset and it progressively got worse. But I have found a permanent fix for it and can now listen to multimedia without constant audio popping or cracking that was driving me insane. The issue isn't actually with the product but the default driver Windows 10 installs when you insert the dongle into a USB port for the first time and becuase iCUE sees the driver already installed it uses that faulty one instead of the correct Corsair OEM Driver. (Since the Creative Update Windows has been handling drivers differently.) To stop this from happening and install the Corsair Void Headset without this issue, do the following: 1. Uninstall iCUE from Programs and Features and reboot. Now windows will automatically pick up the device again and reinstall the driver. Do the folllowing to remove the device again and stop it from reinstalling (if any other devices give you issues in future just renable this afterwards): 2. Go to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container". 3. Right click and uninstall all devices under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container and make sure to tick the option "Delete Device Drivers". 4. Search under Control Panel "Hardware" then select the underlined "Change Device Driver Installation Settings". -> Change the option "Automatically Download Drivers..." to "No" or "Never" (if any other devices give you issues in future just re-enable this afterwards). 5. If the device is still visable under "Devices" in the WIndows 10 Settings App Remove it there too. 6. Unplug the Dongle from the Computer and Reboot. 7. Install the latest version of iCUE with the Dongle unplugged and Reboot. 8. Insert the Dongle, iCUE will auto-start and say "No Device Detected" then Windows will install the wrong default driver. 9. Go back to "Device Manager" -> "View" -> "Devices By Container" and uninstall all drivers under the "Corsair VOID RGB Wireless Gaming Headset" container again. 10. iCUE Will now auto-detect your device again and reinstall the correct driver. This fixed my issue and I really hope that this tutorial will help some of you guys with the same issue. Let me know if it worked for you too. Happy listening.
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