Tip

iPO Quick Tip - Cutting iPhone Speaker Buzz

Many cell phones, including Apple's iPhone, can make your speakers emit a really annoying buzz if they get too close together. Luckily, there are alternatives beyond leaving your iPhone in a different room, and the fix I went for cost less than US$10.

I cut a substantial amount of the speaker buzz my iPhone generates by adding ferrite cores to my speaker wires. One core is on the audio cable that runs from my MacBook Pro to my desktop speakers, another is on the wire that connects the right channel speaker, and a third is on the speaker power cord.


One core on my audio out cable...

Ferrite cores are often added to USB and other computer cables because they help cut down on radio interference that could otherwise cause problems with data passing through from device to device. You'll know if a cable has a ferrite core when you see a fat tube shape near one of the cable's plugs.

Since these cores are molded into the cable's plastic sheathing, I couldn't easily pull one off of an old USB cable. Instead, I paid a visit to my local Radio Shack and picked up a two-pack of Snap Choke Cores for US$2.99. They are the same thing, but in a snap-on sheath so you can attach them to any wire you want. I attached one to my audio out cable, and the other to the wire that runs between my left and right speakers. I also picked up a Snap-Together Ferrite Choke Core for $5.29 and attached that to my speaker power cord.


...another on my right-channel speaker wire...

Both kits snap onto the wires easily, and only take a minute or so to install. According to Howstuffworks, you can gang up ferrite cores to block out even more radio interference.

While I am still getting some buzzing through my speakers, it's substantially quieter and doesn't happen as often. I still can't set my iPhone next to my speakers, but I can get it much closer before that annoying buzz kicks in.


...and another on my speaker power cord.

Ferrite cores aren't the only option for cutting down iPhone speaker buzz. lifehacker claims people have had success converting soda cans into radio shields. The trick is to keep the back of your iPhone facing your speakers, which for me unfortunately isn't an option.

Outside of shutting off my iPhone or getting rid of my desktop computer speakers, I haven't found a 100 percent sure-fire way to completely eliminate iPhone speaker buzz. Until I find that magic fix, however, ferrite cores are making that buzz far more tolerable.

6 comments from the community.

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A guest said: (hide)

I, for one, can't believe the FCC let the cellphone companies get away with this...

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gslusher said:

member since 13 Nov 2002 with 2088 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Guest wrote:
I, for one, can't believe the FCC let the cellphone companies get away with this...

With what, obeying the laws of physics? The problem lies with the speakers, not with the phone. The phone must put out RF, even when it's not being used (unless it's turned off). That will be picked up by UNSHIELDED cables like most speaker cables and power cords. The chokes act as low-pass filters on the cables.

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A guest said: (hide)

gslusher wrote:
With what, obeying the laws of physics?

I guess CDMA phones don't obey the laws of physics, because that technology doesn't seem to cause nearly the level of interference. Mostly it's manufacturers who have value-engineered the available mitigation technologies out of the device.

But don't take my word for it. Apparently ours is a debate going back to at least 2005:

http://www.edn.com/index.asp?layout=article&articleid=CA498768

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gslusher said:

member since 13 Nov 2002 with 2088 posts, unranked, send him a message or view his profile

Anonymous wrote:
gslusher wrote:
With what, obeying the laws of physics?

I guess CDMA phones don't obey the laws of physics, because that technology doesn't seem to cause nearly the level of interference. Mostly it's manufacturers who have value-engineered the available mitigation technologies out of the device.

But don't take my word for it. Apparently ours is a debate going back to at least 2005:

http://www.edn.com/index.asp?layout=article&articleid=CA498768

That article seems to discuss interference within the phone, itself, not outside, though the causes may be similar. The problem seems to be inherent in the way GSM operates and may be impossible to eliminate at the phone, as its transmitter turns on and off at 217 Hz. That fluctuation is at an audible frequency and could be picked up by unshielded wires, like the speaker cables mentioned, and rectified by an audio amplifier (e.g., in a powered speaker).

It looks to me that the article's suggested mitigations within a phone are mostly aimed at protecting the audio circuit from the RF & power fluctuations, not in decreasing the 217 Hz output. IOW, the author is telling phone designers to do pretty much the same thing as the TMO article suggests.

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A guest said: (hide)

I have found a solution to this buzzing. You can find it at http://www.stopthebuzzin.com. It is a simple device you slip under your ipod or cellphone and it shields external speakers from the interference. I use them at my desk at work all day and no more buzzing. It was driving me crazy.

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A guest said: (hide)

Guest wrote:
I have found a solution to this buzzing. You can find it at http://www.stopthebuzzin.com. It is a simple device you slip under your ipod or cellphone and it shields external speakers from the interference. I use them at my desk at work all day and no more buzzing. It was driving me crazy.
Pardon, why link to a page that requires authentication to see? Information that needs that much security probably isn't going to be useful to the anonymous among us, 'guest'.

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