I have also searched around, and other people have had the same issues, 4i4 gen. 3 crashes/re-starts on high input volume (when clipping) and Focusrite 4i4 crashing when Software (DAW) Playback clips using default levels.

I have tried everything, and am at a complete loss. I bought the 4i4 specifically so I can route all of my audio inputs/outputs through it. I am seriously considering returning this because it's ridiculous that I spent ~$200 on a device that will crash when someone yells into the mic or when a game gets too loud.


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Hello Im new to the community, I joines to ask one question: Why does my JBL extreme turns off when I play it at loud volume, it first showed months ago but I didnt actually saw what was making it turn off until recently, I played a bass boosted video on youtube and it suddenly turned off the moment the drop came. Any answers would be helpful thanks!!!

I use the control buttons (volume down ) on the speaker itself when on call and works works well. The volume slider on volume slider displayed on phone can be 0 but the sound reduces further when lowered from the Volume down button on the speaker.

In my Clip Jam (version 1.03) the volume option (Normal or High) shows up in North America and RoW regions but not in Europe.

I suppose the Sport and the Jam behave the same regarding that setting.

Federal Communications Commission (FCC or Commission) rules require commercials to have the same average volume as the programs they accompany. In the Commercial Advertisement Loudness Mitigation (CALM) Act, Congress directed the FCC to establish these rules, which went into effect on December 13, 2012.

Q: Does the FCC currently regulate loud commercials?

A: Yes. The Commission adopted rules on December 13, 2011 that require commercials to have the same average volume as the programs they accompany. The rules became effective on December 13, 2012, one year after the date of their adoption. Broadcast television stations and pay TV providers were given until this date to be in full compliance.

Q: What is the ATSC A/85 Recommended Practice?

A: The ATSC A/85 RP is a set of methods to measure and control the audio loudness of digital programming, including commercials. This standard can be used by all broadcast television stations and pay TV providers.

Q: What can I do about loud commercials?

A: Provide the FCC with specific information about TV commercials that seem louder than the programming they accompany by filing a complaint. You may also submit a complaint to the relevant TV station, pay TV provider, programming network or advertiser to convey your concern.

Q: Will the new rules eliminate the problem of loud commercials?

A: The rules should eliminate any systematic difference between the loudness of commercials and the loudness of the programming they accompany. The ATSC practice that Congress directed us to adopt does not set an absolute cap on loudness. Rather, it requires commercials to have the same average volume as the programming they accompany, so that the volume a consumer chooses is the one at which both the programming and the advertisements will air. We hope and expect that compliance with this practice will significantly reduce the problem of loud commercials for consumers.

The Commission will rely on consumer complaints to monitor industry compliance with the rules. You may report commercials that seem louder than the programming they accompany to the FCC at any time. This information will help identify possible problem areas and will assist the Commission in enforcement of the rules. Specifically, the Commission will use the detailed information from complaints to identify patterns or trends of noncompliance for a particular station, pay TV provider or commercial.

I have Iphone 13 and the volume during a normal phone call is very loud even on the lowest setting. My ear is aching. I have tried everything from the settings and the side buttons. Is there any working solution besides changing the phone with another brand?

The volume for the headset is extremely loud. I had to have the master volume under 20 for anything to be bearable. I Googled some solutions and am currently using the Equalizer APO; however, in order for me to have a tolerable level I need to adjust the dB so much that I get a really loud static sound from it. So, for now, I've settled with it just having it at a -20 dB, and having my master volume under 30. It's still quite loud though.

Yes, the issue is still there. I put the dB back to 0 for the Equalizer APO, and the sounds from the head are still extremely loud at 100; however, I can have the master volume up slight more now. I have it set at 25 at the moment, instead of 16.

It really is a show stopper when surfing channels, especially at night in bed. I mean it's not a bit louder, as I understand some stations do vary a little bit here and there. The volume on the station's I listed blow you out of your chair. Like 3X the volume of other stations.

Unfortunately the FCC doesn't police the networks as they should. There are a lot of ways broadcasters can circumvent loudness standards, like pumping up the volume in surround channels or compressing the signal to incredible levels. That is what you are hearing. You could try going to: menu>settings>audio and video>audio > dynamic range and set it to heavy. That should bring the louder stations closer to the normal ones.

Audio levels dramatically changing from one channel to another is unacceptable for a service that costs this much. For background, all video streams entering the FIOS ecosystem are transcoded (from the telecaster's compression format to FIOS' internal compression format) and transrated (from the telecaster's higher datarate to FIOS' much lower data rate). With this much processing taking place at the headend, are we to believe loudness normalization isn't possible? I'm sure these systems clamp video brightness to 100%, why not audio? The only reason this is taking place is because it's intentional.

If you truly think its Verizon doing the un-leveling of stations, then why is it the SAME channels that are unusually loud on ATT U-Verse too? I had both services and the same channels are louder on both services. According to your theory, they must be paying BOTH providers to allow their volume to be way above other stations. Also the only reason anybody in today's world would want to do this is for radio, where people used to scan for channels by turning a dial, and the louder stations won peoples attention. You can't do this anymore even with radio, so your point is moot. Give us a VALID reason why a station would benefit by being louder that another?

Now, when Disintegration came out I was of an age where I played everything as loud as I dared, parents and neighbours permitting, so at the time The Cure\u2019s entreaty was superfluous. But even so, at the time I remember wondering what difference it could possibly make. If I turned the music up, surely it would just sound\u2026 well\u2026 louder? The notes were going to be the same, after all. The vocals too. The drums and bass and keyboards wouldn\u2019t sound different, surely? Why should it bother Robert Smith whether I play Disintegration at volume 3, or with everything turned up to 11?

Click on Windows Icon / Settings / Sound. Scroll down to the bottom to the "Advanced Sound Options" section, then click on "App volume and device preferences". There, you will find volume controls for Master Volume and apps that you can use the slider function to adjust for each one.

Just installed Arch on my laptop. Pulse works pretty weird; when set the volume to lower than 16%, the whole system would be completely mute.

But if I play audio with other backends, it would go normal; when only one backend is in use, the strange behavior comes back.

Same issue, the volume is too loud for anything coming out of the speaker at the bottom-left (only the private communication volume, with the phone grip handle, uses the top speaker and is quiet enough, see screenshot by Mixigodo).

On start up Audacity 2.05, or Audacity Portable 1.2.6 have maximum Volume as a default setting.

When playing a track - volume is at maximum.

When a playing back a track edit - the volume is at maximum. 2351a5e196

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