Auto sensing not working correctly

Fralle

Active member
Joined
Mar 13, 2024
Messages
112
So I understand that this feature only works when in idle, and sure that's fine. However to me it seems more like it is a hit and miss really. Yesterday I made sure it was in idle, even used the remote to the it dim and absolutely nothing happened when turning on the TV. Anyone else with this problem?
 
So I understand that this feature only works when in idle, and sure that's fine. However to me it seems more like it is a hit and miss really. Yesterday I made sure it was in idle, even used the remote to the it dim and absolutely nothing happened when turning on the TV. Anyone else with this problem?
How is your TV connected?
Have you enabled the auto sensing on that input?

The WiiM don't have to be idle, it will switch to the input that have a signal as soon as all other inputs are silent.
 
The TV is connected optical out directly to the wiim pro+ and yes, i have enabled auto sensing but it does only work like 50% of the times.
 
I don't understand why Wiim doesn't use the voice-activated microphone of its proprietary remote control for sound calibration.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
So I understand that this feature only works when in idle, and sure that's fine. However to me it seems more like it is a hit and miss really. Yesterday I made sure it was in idle, even used the remote to the it dim and absolutely nothing happened when turning on the TV. Anyone else with this problem?
Hi,
I don't want to start a new thread, so I'm writing here. Up until now, my Wiim Pro Plus would switch to the optical input (from the TV) regardless of whether it was on standby or idle. This changed after the last update 4.8.628343. Now it only works when it's idle. Has anyone else noticed the same? I tried restarting of course.
Edit:
I just noticed something interesting: the situation described above occurs when standby mode is enabled from the remote. When the Wiim goes into standby mode by itself (after the time set in the options), everything works normally - the signal on the optical input wakes the device and switches the input to optical). Interesting...
 
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