fireberd may have some better suggestions.
I'd also be tempted to try Audacity and see what the levels are like there, just in case it's something to do with the echolink software itself? Also, Audacity has the advantage that you could experiment with levels offline without being in the middle of a conversation with someone.īut as I said I don't know much about this stuff. I would definitely try it in as a quiet an environment as possible, to see if it makes a difference. Don't think so i use ham radio software echolink and all they have said is my audio is very quiet not enough behind it, i have to put my mouth super close to the mic so they can hear me, they did say there is no background noise at all.When I had background noise behind it, I couldn't hear much noise on playback but because of whatever processing was happening in the mic to try and reduce the noise, it affected the result.