• After 15+ years, we've made a big change: Android Forums is now Early Bird Club. Learn more here.

Help Volume lowered and pausing music when plugged in to headphone jack

surgerush

Android Enthusiast
Oct 18, 2011
454
70
37
New York State
I'm sure someone has already asked this, but I've tried searching and I can't find anything. Every time I plug my phone into my car through the headphone jack and turn the volume all the way up on the phone, it pauses my music, turns down the media volume, and says something along the lines of "if you continue to listen this loudly you may have ear damage"... something like that... Is there any way around this? I'm using Google Music on the Samsung Exhibit II.
 
I also just got one of those music bullet speakers for my phone and I have the same problem with it. I can't put the volume up to max or it tells me "continuing to listen to music above this volume can cause hearing damage". When I go above that volume, it ends up pausing my music and turning my volume down. It does this with Slacker radio as well. It's starting to drive me crazy. Please someone help me, there has to be some way to bypass this or something.
 
Upvote 0
Well, just tried talking to T-Mobile customer support, they say it doesn't look like it's defaulted by Samsung to do this, so they recommended I do a master reset... First of all, I'd rather live with it than reset my entire phone. Second, it's CLEARLY defaulted by Samsung, every music program I run gives me the same warning after I turn the volume up, and every program pauses and turns the volume down, so it's clearly built into the phone. This sucks..... Just tried downloading PowerAmp, just for the heck of it to see if it was the apps, the phone is desperately trying to stop the song from playing, it keeps pausing it but then PowerAmp turns it back on, then it pauses it and so on over and over.... I can only turn it up about 3/4 of the way without it doing that.
 
Upvote 0
Same phone... same exact problem. So this isn't a default on behalf of gingerbread? Just the exhibit II? maaann!! I love it loud!!! This phone gets way louder than my comet did and I would appreciate the ability to appreciate something we all...could appreciate. That's like buying subs with a volume limiter. Or a stereo with a volume limiter. Or having your mother press pause every time you cranked up the stereo! I'm 26 years old, I've heard everything I need to hear. Let me melt my eardrums!
 
Upvote 0
Same phone... same exact problem. So this isn't a default on behalf of gingerbread? Just the exhibit II? maaann!! I love it loud!!! This phone gets way louder than my comet did and I would appreciate the ability to appreciate something we all...could appreciate. That's like buying subs with a volume limiter. Or a stereo with a volume limiter. Or having your mother press pause every time you cranked up the stereo! I'm 26 years old, I've heard everything I need to hear. Let me melt my eardrums!

I completely agree, and I even somewhat understand if you could only plug in headphones to the headphone jack. I just can't believe nobody took into consideration that speakers and what not will also be plugged into the jack. It's definitely not a Gingerbread problem, just the phone itself. I'm still too worried to root my phone, I really don't want a $200 paperweight, but I know for sure that I will definitely be rooting this phone in the future. Too many small things that bug me.
 
Upvote 0
I'd be pissed if I had this, I don't particularly care for oem modifications to android to start with but this one is pure crap.

I use max volume all the time for plugging into my truck or using my giant sennheiser cans. I do both of those things about 10x more than I do plug in little earbuds where max is actually loud and maybe harmful.
 
Upvote 0
I found a possible solution although it does require buying a piece of hardware.

Here is the link:

http://www.amazon.com/Britelink-Bluetooth-Audio-Receiver-Portable/dp/B0059M4G9K/

Basically this is a Bluetooth audio receiver that plugs into a standard 3.5mm audio jack. So you plug this into the audio jack of your car (or stereo) and pair your Android phone to it. Since this uses Bluetooth there should be no volume issues.

The device is less than $40 (actually closer to $30) so it might be worth the try.
 
Upvote 0
Every time I plug my phone into my car through the headphone jack and turn the volume all the way up on the phone, it pauses my music, turns down the media volume, and says something along the lines of "if you continue to listen this loudly you may have ear damage"... something like that... Is there any way around this? I'm using Google Music on the Samsung Exhibit II.

I'm using 3 (cubed) and I don't have this problem. Got a text on the volume control (listening beyond this value can damage ears) but it does not stop anything and I can push the volume all the way up.

I'm rooted and I frozed a lot of useless system applications with titanium backup (see list of what seems ok to remove on the all things root topic. I believe it's the explanation, but 3 is free so you can try just in case...)
 
Upvote 0
The receiver wouldn't work for how I use it, I wouldn't be able to plug it into stuff, I'd need them to plug into the receiver if anything.
Well I thought you said that one of the reasons you use the headphone out jack is for the car. So I assumed you have a 3.5mm jack on the car stereo (fairly common these days). If so then that is what that blue tooth receiver is made for. It simply plugs into a 3.5mm headphone jack (I'm sure an adapter can be used if needed) and it sends the audio signal that way (which it receives via blue tooth from the phone). The particular device that I linked to even comes with a USB charger so you can use it with a cigarette lighter charger thing.

Seems a good work-a-round to me :)
 
Upvote 0
Well I thought you said that one of the reasons you use the headphone out jack is for the car. So I assumed you have a 3.5mm jack on the car stereo (fairly common these days). If so then that is what that blue tooth receiver is made for. It simply plugs into a 3.5mm headphone jack (I'm sure an adapter can be used if needed) and it sends the audio signal that way (which it receives via blue tooth from the phone). The particular device that I linked to even comes with a USB charger so you can use it with a cigarette lighter charger thing.

Seems a good work-a-round to me :)


I have a 2000 mustang that still has the stock deck in it, so I actually use a cassette adapter, no jack, but I understand what you're saying. Just wouldn't work out for me. I'll try player pro next though.
 
Upvote 0
So the cassette adapter has a male 3.5mm plug on it?

You should still be able to use it with the device I pointed out by simply getting an adapter.

For instance something like this:

For only $0.38 each when QTY 50+ purchased - 3.5mm Stereo Jack to 3.5mm Stereo Jack Adaptor - Gold Plated | 3.5mm <--> 3.5mm Adapters

I'm sure you could also find the same thing at a Radio Shack.

Basically you want an adapter with 2 female 3.5mm ends. The cassette adapter plugs into one end and the blue tooth receiver into the other.
 
Upvote 0
So the cassette adapter has a male 3.5mm plug on it?

You should still be able to use it with the device I pointed out by simply getting an adapter.

For instance something like this:

For only $0.38 each when QTY 50+ purchased - 3.5mm Stereo Jack to 3.5mm Stereo Jack Adaptor - Gold Plated | 3.5mm <--> 3.5mm Adapters

I'm sure you could also find the same thing at a Radio Shack.

Basically you want an adapter with 2 female 3.5mm ends. The cassette adapter plugs into one end and the blue tooth receiver into the other.

Ok, thanks alot, I'll definitely be looking more into this and hope it helps.
 
Upvote 0
I'm sure someone has already asked this, but I've tried searching and I can't find anything. Every time I plug my phone into my car through the headphone jack and turn the volume all the way up on the phone, it pauses my music, turns down the media volume, and says something along the lines of "if you continue to listen this loudly you may have ear damage"... something like that... Is there any way around this? I'm using Google Music on the Samsung Exhibit II.

I did have my music volume knocked down a knotch or two while using my headphone to car connection once or twice. But I've never seen the message or experienced any pauses. I use Deadbeef music player for my music (because of the many music formats it supports) and Tunein Radio for streaming radio, I've used both with my car. My phone is rooted, but I don't think it is the reason I don't get the message since I haven't changed anything related to that (that I know of). That message would really tick me off as well, especially since my headphones have their own volume slider on them. I just tried max volume with my headphones and it played just fine, didn't put them in my ears though cause that would be a bit loud.
 
Upvote 0
I haven't experienced this message and pausing yet, though I just got my phone last night. What I DID notice, which was almost more of a problem for me, was if I do any sound effects or anything along those lines, any time there's heavy base or noise in general, the entire song gets "turned down" when it gets too noisy, then reverts back to normal immediately. For example, say there's a song with a heavy bass drum - every time the bass drum hits, it's like it over powers everything else, or it's too much and the whole sound is clipped a bit. I know I'm not explaining it well... I haven't tinkered with it much yet as I just noticed this on my drive into work this morning - I use an old tape adapter plugged into the headphone jack. Works perfect on every other phone/device I've used. Very odd... I hope I can fix it b/c I use my phone for music a LOT.
 
Upvote 0

BEST TECH IN 2023

We've been tracking upcoming products and ranking the best tech since 2007. Thanks for trusting our opinion: we get rewarded through affiliate links that earn us a commission and we invite you to learn more about us.

Smartphones