Windows 10: *help* Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation??

Discus and support *help* Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation?? in Windows 10 Ask Insider to solve the problem; Does anyone know what this is and why its taking up so much memory?? submitted by /u/develi1k [link] [comments]... Discussion in 'Windows 10 Ask Insider' started by /u/develi1k, Dec 7, 2019.

  1. *help* Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation??


    Does anyone know what this is and why its taking up so much memory??

    submitted by /u/develi1k
    [link] [comments]

    :)
     
    /u/develi1k, Dec 7, 2019
    #1
  2. David Haz Win User

    Windows audio device graph isolation problem

    Hello,

    Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation is an official part of Windows and serves as the primary audio engine in Windows 10. It handles the audio enhancement effects provided by Windows. If you are using any enhancements, we suggest that you disable them and
    see if the sounds stops. You may disable your enhancements by following the steps below:

    • Right-click the Volume icon in the Taskbar.
    • Click Sounds.
    • From the Sound window, click the Playback tab, then select the device that you suspect is causing the issue.
    • Click Properties.
    • On the Enhancements tab, click the Disable all enhancements checkbox.
    • Click OK.
     
    David Haz, Dec 7, 2019
    #2
  3. Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation High CPU

    Hi,

    Thank you for posting your question in the Microsoft Community Forums.

    I appreciate the efforts taken by you in troubleshooting this issue. The details provided helps us to avoid repeating the steps.

    I can understand the situation must be different for you when the Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation doesn't work as it should.

    Windows uses the process Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation as its main component of Windows audio engine. It helps Windows in sound enhancement process. Windows Driver Developer uses Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation to insert their Audio effect
    to enhance the sound quality.

    Please answer these questions to get clarity on this issue:

    1. Are you aware of any changes made to the PC prior to this issue?
    2. Have you installed all the pending updates on the PC?
    3. Which security software did you use to perform the virus scan on the PC?

    However, let us follow these methods and check if that helps.

    Method 1: Let us now follow these steps to uninstall the audio driver completely.

    1. Go to control panel and open device manager. Or press Windows + R key at same time to open Run and type devmgmt.msc.
    2. Click on “Sound, video and game controllers” in device manager.
    3. Right click on a sound card and then click on properties.
    4. Click on the Driver tab.
    5. Click on the Uninstall Driver button.
    6. A dialog box will ask you to confirm the action. Check the option
      Delete the driver software for this device. Click on OK.
    7. Once done, click on View and select Devices by connection on the Device manager.
    8. Expand ACPI x64 based PC.
    9. Expand PCI Express Root complex and right-click on Intel Smart Sound technology Audio controller and uninstall the device.
    10. Make sure to delete the driver if prompted during the uninstall process.
    11. Once done, click on Action and Scan for hardware changes twice in the device manager.
    12. Close Device Manager.
    •Open Settings from the Windows menu.

    •Click on Update and Security and check for updates to get the new audio driver for your computer.

    Method 2: Sometimes answering or calling on
    Skype might be the reason of Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation to use 100% disk. This will happen when you are using the Skype app. To resolve it. You need to reinstall it with the updated version in your Windows 10 PC. You can do that from
    the Microsoft Store.

    We look forward to your response.

    Regards,

    Srimadhwa B

    Microsoft Community-Moderator
     
    Srimadhwa_B, Dec 7, 2019
    #3
  4. MikeG_13 Win User

    *help* Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation??

    Freecell and windows audio device graph isolation problems

    I have been having numerous troubles with "windows audio device graph isolation" suddenly spiking and taking up over 20% of my CPU. I have checked all the boxes and turned off all the enhanced audio options that Google has suggested. It has been a relatively
    good process lately, but today I may have found a culprit that is irritating the process. As soon as I run "Freecell Collection Free" (don't judge me) in Windows 10 the laptop begins whirring and the audio is garbled. Lo and behold the windows audio device
    graph isolation is spiking again. As soon as I close Freecell everything returns to normal.

    Any ideas what is causing this? Any way to stop it? And don't suggest that I not play Freecell during work or my work productivity will drop. Thanks in advance for any help.

    Mike
     
    MikeG_13, Dec 7, 2019
    #4
Thema:

*help* Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation??

Loading...
  1. *help* Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation?? - Similar Threads - *help* Audio Device

  2. Problem with Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    Problem with Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation: A week ago I bought a new laptop, on which I installed Windows 11, it has an i5 13420H 16GB ddr5 ram and an rtx 4050 . The problem is that on the desktop with almost no applications running, Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation consumes at least 6/7% of my processor, during...
  3. Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation Crashing

    in Windows 10 Software and Apps
    Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation Crashing: I reset my PC a few months ago, and since then Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation has crashed almost every time I use the PC. Sometimes it happens several times, and sometimes once or twice.Some debug info from the latest crash:DescriptionFaulting Application Path:...
  4. Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation Crashing

    in Windows 10 Drivers and Hardware
    Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation Crashing: I reset my PC a few months ago, and since then Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation has crashed almost every time I use the PC. Sometimes it happens several times, and sometimes once or twice.Some debug info from the latest crash:DescriptionFaulting Application Path:...
  5. windows audio device graph isolation

    in Windows 10 Drivers and Hardware
    windows audio device graph isolation: this process is taking 40% of cpu consumption making my laptop speedup the fan. i have version 20h2 but it occurs on previous version why this process is taking so much power i'm using headphones if it could be the case i've forced end process and it goes to 3.5% wich...
  6. Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation

    in Windows 10 BSOD Crashes and Debugging
    Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation: Source Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation Summary Stopped working Date ‎04-‎May-‎20 5:28 PM Status Not reported Description Faulting Application Path: C:\Windows\System32\audiodg.exe Problem signature Problem Event Name: APPCRASH Application Name: AUDIODG.EXE...
  7. Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation

    in Windows 10 Ask Insider
    Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation: Hi everyone. I am wondering if the amount of RAM consumed by the Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation is normal; it was consuming 250MB when I took the screenshot (link below). Google says that this process should not consume huge amounts of system resources. So how can I fix...
  8. Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation

    in Windows 10 BSOD Crashes and Debugging
    Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation: The process is using around 4,800 to 5,000 MB. (5,400MB at the moment) Is this usual? It is my biggest user of memory. Chrome comes in at only ~419MB https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/windows-audio-device-graph-isolation/4a908511-e8a4-44a5-9e2c-68b9d1e7ce6c
  9. Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation

    in Windows 10 Drivers and Hardware
    Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation: The last month or so, my Windows Audion Device Graph Isolation consistently takes up between 20%-70% of my RAM at any given time, even when I'm not playing audio. I know that this shouldn't even be the case when I'm playing audio. The other methods listed in other community...
  10. Windows audio device graph isolation

    in Windows 10 Drivers and Hardware
    Windows audio device graph isolation: I have the same issue several others have reported, that Windows audio device graph isolation is eating CPU. As recommended, I have performed virus scans several times, reloaded drivers, and nothing has helped. The enhancements window for Speakers/Headphone Properties...