Thank You for your continued support and contributions!
With targets that support gain settings above 0dB, it would be nice to cap the gain at 0dB.
I think there is one case where a configurable limit would be useful : if you increase the volume without looking at it, and you are in a quiet part, it's easy to set it higher than you would if you look at the screen at the same time.
Sometimes I turn it up (through my vest), so I can't pull it out and look to see how high it is. I'd like to limit the amount I can raise it. I mean, if it's a setting, I can always go back and change it if I need to.
What about this real world scenario:- In the evening you connect your DAP to your stereo receiver or active loudspeakers and set the volume on your DAP at highest level- Next morning you forget to rule down the volume before you put on your earphones and then it will really hurt (believe me or try it out yourself :-)I am throwing this into discussion because I see at least three aspects of controlling the volume:First, set the volume to a configurable maximum level so that you can't exceed that value by mistake if you are playing around with the volume control buttons (original poster's inquiry)
Second, allowing me to have a kind of "LINE OUT" mode that supplies a strong signal (max volume) to the amplifier of my stereo device.
Third, avoiding any physiological ear damages even if you have forgotten to reset the volume to a 'normal' level. I can think of a configurable start level after booting the firmware.
When I bought my headphones, in the manual it had a maximum number of Hertz (mabey something else) that they could handle. could you set a limmit on that?
Again, you can do this by putting a volume setting into your fixed.cfg file.
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