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How the iPhone’s Headphone Safety setting can affect a Bluetooth speaker

Friday March 22, 2024. 10:00 AM , from MacOsxHints
Macworld

Apple wants you to avoid damaging your hearing when you’re using an iPhone or iPad (but, strangely, not a Mac). In Settings > Sounds & Haptics > Headphone Safety, enable Reduce Loud Audio, and you can set a threshold above which your iPhone or iPad will moderate sound. It doesn’t create an abrupt cutoff, but it keeps you from hearing sounds above a particular level, measured using standard decibel units.

However, once you enable this setting, it affects all external audio devices, not just wired and wireless headphones and earbuds. Because Bluetooth doesn’t allow a phone or tablet to know what’s connected, just the kind of Bluetooth data requested, Apple throttles the maximum sound to all Bluetooth devices, including externally connected speakers.




Headphone Safety offers a single setting that affects all output via wired headphones and earbuds and all wireless connections over Bluetooth.



Headphone Safety offers a single setting that affects all output via wired headphones and earbuds and all wireless connections over Bluetooth.Foundry

Headphone Safety offers a single setting that affects all output via wired headphones and earbuds and all wireless connections over Bluetooth.Foundry


Foundry

If you forgot that you enabled Headphone Safety or you expected it wouldn’t affect external speakers, your mystery is now solved. My spouse and I troubleshooted the problem when it turned out my phone could produce a louder volume to an external Bluetooth speaker than hers: she had Headphone Safety on, and I did not.

Apple lets you categorize Bluetooth devices in Settings > Bluetooth > device name > info icon > Device Type. But Headphone Safety doesn’t refer to that choice if you’ve set it, nor does Apple show that sound is being throttled when the safety feature is turned on.

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https://www.macworld.com/article/2261125/iphones-headphone-safety-affects-bluetooth-speakers.html

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