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I have a new 2 month old 15" MBP. I Was working on a project, macbook volume was about on half, when suddenly an audio bug occurred with really loud screatching noise and not letting me pause it. After it stopped, the speakers were really quiet, and after the next restart they're clearly blown. Initially I blamed the hardware, though the same thing happened a day later with my Sony 1000X-M3 headphones, luckily the headphones are ok, but that did give me a heart attack.
The situation is not ok, I am not happy. Adobe customer care chat is ridiculous.
MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2018)
Processor: 2,6 GHz Intel Core i7
Memory: 16 GB 2400 MHz DDR4
Graphics: Radeon Pro 560X 4096 MB; Intel UHD Graphics 630 1536 MB
Hi Adobe Community,
UPDATE: Adobe had a small number of user reports about an issue in Premiere Pro that could affect the speakers in the latest MacBook Pro. Adobe has released a patch via the Creative Cloud app to help address this issue. Please update to 13.0.3.
Thank you,
- CM
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If the Macbook Pro is only a couple months old, Apple should repair the speakers for you at no charge (although you'd have to check with them). I just purchased a 15" Macbook Pro myself (this weekend), so if you can think of anything specific that led to the audio screeching, I'd like to know what it is! Same footage/same point in the timeline? Or just a random thing?
Although we're not officially Adobe here, there are some Adobe people who visit on occasion. If you can narrow this down to "when ___ happens, the screech sound appears," it should definitely be reportable as a Premiere bug.
Without more details, it will be hard to pinpoint.
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Hi, can not re-produce, happened at random.
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I just blew my speakers (Macbook Pro 15" 2018) on Adobe Premiere. They are permanently Damaged. I was using the Adobe Premiere 2019 Audio suite for background sound and while tweaking the settings it made a loud distorted noise that hurt even my ears. after that my speakers are unusable.
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Exactly the same problem.
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That happened to me as well. Both times I put a song in the timeline and went to adjust the volume and it made a horrible loud noise and blew my speakers. I couldn’t mute it or anything.
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I've also had the same problem. I was editing files, a very simple video, doing a sound effects pass and it blew out my speakers and now nothing sounds good. Boooooooo!
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Adobe had me check the audio hardware settings. Under the default input they changed it from Mac microphone to no input. They said that was why I blew my speakers.
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I also did that and thought I would be good, but it did it again within 1 minute again. Scared the crap out of me.
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Doesn't make much sense to me and doesn't change the fact that the speakers are damaged. Who's fault is this tho anyway? Apple or Adobe?
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Same here. I just bought a 15" 2018 Macbook Pro last week and it has happened twice in Premiere Pro. I am not easily startled but this scared the s#!+ out of me. The first time it made a loud snappy pop sound and the audio stopped working. The second time it made a terrible distorted sound at full volume, even though my volume was very low, every time I tried to playback a clip with audio. I immediately quit Premiere and went to youtube via chrome and the audio played as normal. So freaking weird. This has only happened when using the built-in speakers. Has anybody had this issue with headphones on?
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Yup, I've heard about this too, with the 2018 models. Apparently it happened because an effect was applied to the audio clip while it was still playing. Perhaps Adobe should disable playback when the user does this, just in case.
I'm suspecting it's something to do with Apple's audio card/drivers, because there's been other issues with a few 2018 MacBook Pros that I've seen too. I've had it happen through my headphones (which is likely a health issue) but luckily it only blows out speakers if the headphones aren't plugged in. Watch out for blowing out your expensive reference monitors though.
My only other hunch is that Premiere Pro is the problem. It hasn't been able to automatically change the Audio Hardware settings when headphones are plugged in and out, because Apple's audio driver system has changed (I believe). If there's a weakness between Premiere and Mac OS then the blame falls onto Adobe here.
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Same thing happened to me. Brand new 15" MBP (2018). Editing a clip in Premiere. Had been using bluetooth earphones, but then shut them off. Came back to Premiere after a bit, hit spacebar, and got the awful noise. Hit space bar immediately to stop. Music track had "music" attribute applied to it. Was not doing any input. Speaker volume, when tested with Spotify/iTunes was very quiet. Reset nvram, speakers back to normal volume, but rattle coming from right side. Extremely upset. Currently on assignment in India, so hope I'm not up a creek. Not sure who's responsible, but this one is pretty unacceptable. Really bummed.
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Reply from Adobe Sr.Tech Support Consultant:
I read the forum post that you provided us, as of now we don't have any problem/known/trending issue with Macbook Pro speakers.
But, I would like to explain you the problem.
Premiere Pro is a self-destructive software when it comes to crashes.
The software like any other software is also dependent upon the OS/Hardware requirements.
If anything in the OS/Hardware is faulty then a potential problem would come across.
Let me share an example related to such a case:
Hence, when you encounter a crash then the application would shut down.
The application is GPU (Graphic Card) dependent, so if there is anything wrong in the Software/Hardware of the GPU hence the crash would be a bit extreme that would be resulting "(A black screen shutdown/restart).The problem here is not with Premiere Pro but the Graphic Card. Premiere Pro basically was the source/reporter through which the user would get to know there is an issue with the Graphic Card.
I believe something like this has happened from the application where there is a faulty module in the OS/Hardware specifications of the Macbook Pro resulting into the problem you have.
Upon that, have you contacted Apple yet regarding this problem, or have they run a full diagnostics of the problem to conclude the result out?
Upon detection itself, they should determine that the problem would be in the Hardware/OS issue and that problem came in witness when an Application dependent upon the module came in action.
I would also encourage you to read this article: https://www.macrumors.com/2018/08/08/2018-macbook-pro-crackling-speakers-reports/
This is one of the articles I have found online where users who are using applications such a browser, Media Player where the problem had surfaced in.
The problem basically is not with the "web browser or the media player" its basically the reporter of the problem that some issue has occured post the interaction.
I would conclude this mail but apologizing the inconvenience you must have had during this problem, but the problem has surfaced via the hardware according to us.
I also have reported this problem to the engineering team who also share somewhat a similar opinion on what potentially is the problem here.
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I have spoken with an authorized Apple service technician here in New Delhi
and we are scheduled to run diagnostics on Monday. My only concern is
getting the hardware fixed and ensuring that it doesn't happen again,
regardless of whether it is Apple or Adobe at fault. Assuming there's no
issue in getting it fixed, so long as the root cause is addressed and
doesn't happen again, all good. Understood your response, though there is
absolutely no way at two-month-old $3000 computer along with state of the
art creative software should have a problem of this magnitude and
inconvenience for the customer. So, currently still pretty upset, but
hoping that things get resolved with as little inconvenience as possible.
As for the crackling speaker, I read up on that yesterday and am confident
that that issue is separate from this. In my case, I definitely have a
blown speaker as a result of a glitch that occurred when using Premiere
that caused my system to make an indescribably loud "feedback" type sound.
Thank you for your response. I'll keep in contact through the repair
process should further details from Adobe be required.
Best regards,
Elliott Asbury
On Fri, Dec 14, 2018 at 9:03 PM andripeetso <forums_noreply@adobe.com>
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Thank you for your reply.
I agree with you and I agree that these issues are separate, as I experienced the same issue as you my speakers were definitely blown as well. I will get my laptop back from apple on monday - hopefully fixed. However, I do not know what steps to take to prevent this from happening again.
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Good luck!! And let me know your result. Much appreciated!
Sent from my iPhone
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This just happened to me. Same exact thin. Scheduled a call with Apple for tomorrow. Ridiculous.
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Happened to me a couple weeks ago. Definitely an Apple hardware issue, though they are still dodging the issue. No way hardware should allow software to damage it.
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Same exact thing happened to me. Brand new 2018 15” MBP using Premiere Rush. I clicked “reduce background noise” before hitting play on a clip and it let loose the loudest noise that physically blew my speakers.
Been an Apple and Adobe user for 15 years and have never seen anything like it.
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Same thing happened to me yesterday. Really scared. I was working on Premiere Pro editing with my mac pro 2018(pro vega20) (3Pro!!!!!) and I worked with really small volume cause it was in the middle of dawn. Whatever,when I hit space,A VERY LOUD freaky sound was made from the top- right side of macbook(so I made a guess that it was from the charger or touch bar but it might be not).It sound like 50 times bigger of tape rewinding, or electiricity. I was really frightened.
Now,after a day of accident my speaker seems okay yet,but worried if something damaged in my laptop. I hasn't been a month buying it and I wanted to keep my macbook safe and clean.. Oh my god!
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I had the same thing happen to me.
MacBook Pro, 2018, Radeon Pro Vega 20 4080 MB, RIDICULOUSLY expensive...
I simply clicked on the "Enhance Speech" check box while the clip was playing and the loudest sound possible blasted out of the speakers. Now the right speaker is damaged. Great.
Unacceptable for a pro machine this expensive and a piece of pro software that I pay monthly for.
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I have the exact same spec MacBook as the OP. I was editing a simple video and went to clean up the audio in the audio tab and like everyone else the playback was at max and completely blew out the speakers. I could even smell an electrical burning smell. I took it to apple the next day and they sent it out to be repaired under warranty (awesome on their part.)
I got the laptop back a few days ago, and everything was fixed. Still weary this could happen again, I kept the volume on my laptop low and didn't mess with the audio tab. The only modification I made was a 3db volume adjustment. About 20 minutes ago it happened again and although I stopped it immediately, the right speaker is now blown out.
This is ridiculous, I don't know who's fault this is, but it needs to be fixed. I edit on this laptop for school, work, and personal use. Between the three there is no room for downtime. Someone is dropping the ball here.
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So Ive commented a while back where this has happened twice to me already. Now, I always use external speaking and I always turn them OFF before I change any kind of audio, which sucks. I have paid good money for both the macbook and the entire suite, there should be no reason why this is still a problem. That's my rant. I talked to adobe and all they could think of was that it is my audio hardware setting that messed it up. They had me change my default input to no input and assured me that the problem was solved I don't know if it has fixed the problem or not cause I always use external speaking when editing videos now. If anyones speakers have blown and their default input was on "no input" please share on the form I would love to know if this really did fix the problem.
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I just had the same problem as everyone else in this forum. Brand new 2018 MBP 15-inch with touch bar. Premiere Pro CC 13.0.2. Default Input: MacBook Pro Microphone / Default Output: MacBook Pro Speakers. More Premiere and Apple specs are attached.
Had recently launched Premiere and opened a project. Deleted several folders containing unneeded sequences and footage. Opened a sequence (all footage and audio properly linked), and hit spacebar. Got distortion sound loud enough to make me jump even though my system volume was set to half. Stopped playback and the sound stopped. Restarted the sequence and it happened again. The 1 audio clip was set to -8.0 dB and had a Parametric Equalizer clip effect. No adjustments to the main audio track.
Quit Premiere, reopened and played the same sequence. Sound was normal and no more issues. My right speaker is blown for sure. I want to repair it, but after reading this forum, I'm afraid it will happen again.
Is this issue being resolved for everyone after changing Default Input to "No Input"?