Audiophile 2x2, 24-Bit/192 kHz USB Audio Interface with MIDAS Mic Preamplifiers.
I use an external USB audio device (In case it's relevant, it's the Behringer XENYX 302 USB). The device is supposed to use the generic 'USB Audio CODEC' driver; Behringer does not provide any original driver software for this device. The device has worked for me just fine on Windows 10 until a recent update, which caused the device to be incompatible with ASIO. It would buffer, pop and glitch when used through ASIO, making it useless as an output device through programs which require ASIO, such as Cubase.
Figuring that the issue might be ASIO related, I found a new ASIO driver by a company named AQVOX and installed it. The driver does not work, and it has completely reconfigured my device so that it no longer registers as 'USB Audio CODEC' in my playback devices but as an AQVOX device. I tried to uninstall the AQVOX driver so I could reinstall the generic 'USB Audio CODEC' driver in the device manager, but this didn't work. All it accomplished was completely removing the device from my list of playback devices (even as a disabled device), while still showing up in device manager as an AQVOX audio device, now with an error symbol as the device doesn't work properly anymore. I tried yet another custom ASIO driver, which did successfully get the device to output audio again, but as it is only a trial of the software, it beeps every 30 seconds, making it useless still. It changed the name of my device in the device manager to 'AudioDevice on USB Bus 2.8.45' and similarly to the AQVOX drivers, every attempt to uninstall it fails. No matter what I do, I cannot find a way to get the device back to its original state, and showing up as USB Audio CODEC again.
![Audio Audio](/uploads/1/2/5/7/125772118/941057792.jpg)
Hence the question. I want to know if there is any way I can reset the device's built-in information, to reverse what those two custom driver installers did by completely changing the device's information. I want to uninstall the new, custom drivers and revert it back to its original state as USB Audio CODEC. I know the device's hardware is still in perfect condition. I know the drivers can be altered because those two installer programs have done it successfully. I simply want to know how I can manually mimic those installers so I can undo what they did. I've tried using the 'Update Drivers' feature in the device manager to install the generic USB Audio driver (among others) countless times, to no avail. Hopefully someone knows a way I can manually alter this device's information and reinstall the original driver.