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berilthedwarf berilthedwarf is offline
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Default Volume of Headphones

This is something thats bothered me for years- that is, the output of
the "headphone" jack on my PC outputs at a volume far too great for
headphones... requiring the volume settings to be moved about whenever
I switch between headphones and speakers (amplified).

The volume sliders have to be almost to zero for the sound to be at
the peroper volume- the headphones requiring a lot less power for the
same perceived volume. The easiest way I can think of getting around
this is to have either an external volume control (which i've been
unable to find) that would simply plug into the jack and accept the
headphone's plug, or a similar set up but with a fixed resistance/
impedance to protect my eardrums.

Not entirely certain if this is the right place to ask about this- but
i've looked around online and haven't found anything promising,
thought maybe someone would know better where to look or the easiest/
cheapest way to go about building something like this (yes, i can
solder).

Thanks!
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Peter Larsen[_3_] Peter Larsen[_3_] is offline
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Default Volume of Headphones

berilthedwarf wrote:

This is something thats bothered me for years- that is, the output of
the "headphone" jack on my PC outputs at a volume far too great for
headphones... requiring the volume settings to be moved about whenever
I switch between headphones and speakers (amplified).


Easiest: an external headphone amp, there are several, Behringer is probably
budget friendly.

The sound card in his here laptop says BEEB at 0 dB FS when a fader is
touched with the mouse, just to politely inform you that you have contact
with the fader.


Kind regards

Peter Larsen



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Richard Crowley Richard Crowley is offline
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Default Volume of Headphones


"berilthedwarf" wrote in message
...
This is something thats bothered me for years- that is, the output of
the "headphone" jack on my PC outputs at a volume far too great for
headphones... requiring the volume settings to be moved about whenever
I switch between headphones and speakers (amplified).

The volume sliders have to be almost to zero for the sound to be at
the peroper volume- the headphones requiring a lot less power for the
same perceived volume. The easiest way I can think of getting around
this is to have either an external volume control (which i've been
unable to find) that would simply plug into the jack and accept the
headphone's plug, or a similar set up but with a fixed resistance/
impedance to protect my eardrums.

Not entirely certain if this is the right place to ask about this- but
i've looked around online and haven't found anything promising,
thought maybe someone would know better where to look or the easiest/
cheapest way to go about building something like this (yes, i can
solder).

Thanks!


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Richard Crowley Richard Crowley is offline
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Posts: 4,172
Default Volume of Headphones

"berilthedwarf" wrote ...
This is something thats bothered me for years- that is, the output of
the "headphone" jack on my PC outputs at a volume far too great for
headphones...


"Far too great" for WHAT headphones? I use several different
headphones is a wide variety of different sources and have
never seen this problem.

requiring the volume settings to be moved about whenever
I switch between headphones and speakers (amplified).


Why wouldn't you adjust the volume setting of each source
so that it is the right level in your headphones? Or are we
missing something here?

The volume sliders have to be almost to zero for the sound to be at
the peroper volume- the headphones requiring a lot less power for the
same perceived volume.


From ALL sources? From one particular source?
Does the source program/utility not have its own
output level control?

The easiest way I can think of getting around
this is to have either an external volume control (which i've been
unable to find)


Do you mean like these?...
http://www.shure.com/PersonalAudio/P...vel_attenuator
http://www.koss.com/koss/kossweb.nsf/p?openform&pc^ac^VC20
(likely others, but these were at the top of Google's list)

that would simply plug into the jack and accept the
headphone's plug, or a similar set up but with a fixed resistance/
impedance to protect my eardrums.

Not entirely certain if this is the right place to ask about this- but
i've looked around online and haven't found anything promising,
thought maybe someone would know better where to look or the easiest/
cheapest way to go about building something like this (yes, i can
solder).


We typically insert a variable resistance (pot) in
series and adjust to taste, then use an equivalent
fixed resistor. It is easier to make than to describe.

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