My child has autism and does not understand that he can’t max out his tv volume all day everyday and through the night. No matter what we tell him or set a timer or anything. I also can’t just shut the tv off at night as he will just turn it back on.

Is there a secret menu or anything to set max volume? Or an app or anything I can download on my phone or the tv or something to limit the volume? I’m desperate.

Thanks!

  • Kyla_3049@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I don’t know, but if he has poor hearing or the sound is unclear, try changing the sound profiles.

  • magpupu2@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    put the tv on a smart plug. You can then tell it to turn off remotely or set a routine for when it turns off and on

  • roasty-duck@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    There is no way to limit it in software at least not yet. One option would be to take it apart unplug the speakers and fit some smaller ones that are far quieter, otherwise you’re out of luck sadly

  • d-car@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Put resistors on the speaker wires and make sure they have air space to dissipate the heat they generate.

  • TheLastTreeOctopus@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I think a soundbar would be helpful here. See if you can find a cheap-ish one with a physical volume knob.

    Plug the TV into the soundbar, and turn the TV volume all the way up. With the TV at max volume, adjust the soundbar volume to whatever maximum level you find acceptable. Super glue the volume knob in place so he can’t make it louder. He’ll still be able to adjust the volume up and down on his TV, but it just won’t get any louder than the volume you set on the soundbar. If you think he might unplug the soundbar to get around this, then you can also superglue the cable into the TV and soundbar. Just make sure the glue doesn’t touch any metal part of the cable or the ports that it goes into. You’d really only need a drop or two of it anyway, so it should be easy to be careful about it. I’m not sure if superglue is conductive or not, but if it is, it could cause a short and make things malfunction if it gets on the metal bits.

    I realize this solution is far from elegant, but I can’t think of a better way that doesn’t involve taking the TV apart and disconnecting the speakers or adding resistors, or what have you. Just keep in mind doing this will void your warranty on the TV if you have one!

  • Cypher10110@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    I wonder if removing the internal speakers so that it only works with headphones would be a more comprehensive solution? (Assuming they are comfortable with headphones more generally)

    Lots of other suggestions seem just too easy to circumvent/reverse.