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what I mean is for example, you have one headphone where a Volume level of 13(on a mp3 player) is average to your ears(not loud, but not soft), but if you switch to another headphone where the volume level is around 19(for average, not loud or soft), does it take up different amounts of battery? my previous headphones broke on my mp3 player, so i switched to another one, and becasue of the different sensitivity, ohms watever tech specs there are, the volume output is different. I am just worried that I am taking up more battery, even though what i hear is the same.

thanks

2006-12-12 11:30:15 · 1 answers · asked by DJ4LIFE 2 in Consumer Electronics Music & Music Players

1 answers

Yes, they do. Think about if you were to hook up speaker sized headphones to some D sized batteries, it wouldn't even work. Now, that is a drastic example but of course the larger the speaker and the more noise produced the more energy it will take up.

2006-12-12 11:38:03 · answer #1 · answered by Phat Kidd 5 · 0 0

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