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Some sound card audio jacks can now inform recent Windows OS's that an audio device is plugged in. Anyone know how it does this? I'm thinking it uses some kind of voltage comparator or resistance measurement.

This question was asked at Superuser. My gut feeling is that the circuit is not as trivial as one of the participants is suggesting, but I'm a bit rusty on circuits.

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4 Answers 4

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While audio jacks often have switches that can be used for plug detection, most codecs now implement jack sensing that measures the impedance and other characteristics of the plugged in device and make that information available to the processor they are connected to.

This is also very helpful in preventing an audio amplifier from trying to drive speakers outside its impedance range and damaging the amp or the speakers.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Do you have any online references for this? Is this done in the audio codec or the driver? \$\endgroup\$
    – J. Polfer
    Feb 22, 2010 at 21:40
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    \$\begingroup\$ Hi sheepsimulator, IDT's AC'97 codec (STAC9752A) implements this impedance-based jack sensing. Unfortunately, it is some proprietary current sensing techniques that IDT's calling Universal Jack(tm). ADI also has a AC'97 codec (AD1888) with yet another proprietary jack sensing mechanism. Nonetheless, it is definitely done in the audio codec chip. Hope this helps... \$\endgroup\$
    – Terry Chen
    Feb 23, 2010 at 0:01
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Most all jacks (DC power or audio) have an extra terminal that is switched on plug insertion. This is a mechanical switch. Some designs use this extra terminal to switch between battery and external power (in the case of DC jacks) or to switch between headphones and speakers (in the case of audio jacks).

In the photo of this DC jack on Digikey you can almost get a good view of the internals. The two lugs on the back of the jack are for the two DC power connections. The third lug on the bottom is the switch input. Audio jacks have a similar arrangement.

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Does it not measure the impedance of whatever is plugged in and then determines what it is based on known values ?

when I insert my speaker jack into the plug, i can hear all the speakers "clicking" one by one, as if the computer is testing to see if they are there...

I found this on http://www.freepatentsonline.com/7579832.html

An audio system includes a CODEC audio jack having left and right audio ports and a jack sense circuit. The jack sense circuit includes left and right amplifiers and a cross-drive impedance sensing circuit. This cross-drive impedance sensing circuit, which is electrically coupled to the left and right audio ports and the left and right amplifiers, detects the resistances of left and right output loads in order to determine characteristics of a device connected to the CODEC audio jack. The cross-drive impedance circuit is configured to measure a resistance of a left output load electrically coupled to the left audio port, in response to a “right” test signal generated by the right amplifier, and is further configured to measure a resistance of a right output load electrically coupled to the right audio port in response to a “left” test signal generated by the left amplifier.

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Take one apart and find out. :)

There are several things it could be doing, depending on whether it's just measuring the presence of a plug (just a jack switch will do), or if it knows the difference between a mic and a headphone, etc (resistance measurement?).

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