earplugs hurt your eardrums more because the earplugs fit right in your ear and it`s just hurting ur eardrum but headphones cover your whole ear and it is not right in your ear whole!! lol ....
earplugs hurt your eardrums more because the earplugs fit right in your ear and it`s just hurting ur eardrum but headphones cover your whole ear and it is not right in your ear whole!! lol ....
Because when you use the headphones and turn the volume up, then take the headphones out, the iPod stores what the volume was when the headphones were in, so next time you plug the headphones in, it goes back to that same volume.
You plug in your headphones and turn up their volume as well as your speakers volume.
There is an audio-out plug next to the USB plugs. Headphones and in-ear headphones can be plugged in there. Volume can be controlled by the Mac volume control, or if present, volume control on the headphone wire. Be sure volume is not too loud when headphones or in-ear headphones are used. Excessive volume can damage hearing ability.
about the middle on the new ipod, or just loud enough 2 hear
Both of my eardrums are perforated after an gromits operation when i was about 10. Now aged 17 and after many years of listening to music on full volume through earphones/headphones it has not effected my hearing. The only issue i have is an aching in my more affected ear after a while of constant loud noise while using earphones, say when watching a film with no breaks. I'd wear them but keep the volume down if it causes discomfort.
the volume bar is at the bottom.
Pro: headphones are respectful to other Con: the headphones are right in your ears, meaning the volume has more chance of damaging your ear drum
The Sony Sony MDR-NC11 headphones are noise cancelling and have in-line volume controls located on the cord.
Radio Shack sells a in-line volume control for headsets.
Sony and Koss both manufacture headphones with in-line decibel (volume) controls.
I suppose it would be the eardrum.