This app was mentioned in 12 comments, with an average of 1.42 upvotes
There's an app on the Play Store specifically for the LG G3 that can change the max volume of headphones and speaker separately ~~if you have a rooted LG G3.~~ double checked and the app store page doesn't say anything about needing to be rooted.
The LG G3 uses a special detection and has the headphone volume fairly low. With that app you can set them to what you want. (using super high settings on the speaker will result in lots of static/crackling, headphones are fine if they are decent quality.)
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.laransoft.volumeG3&hl=en
I fixed it. So,install this: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.laransoft.volumeG3 Give it root access and play around with handset value. I got it at 61 and it's good. If I remember correctly proper values are between 57 and 63.
/u/Bigbouble Does it work?
My main bullet point would be; you can get a phone with similar specs and twice the battery life for $600+.
Believe it or not, the screen CAN do 60FPS. Screen kinda overheats pretty easily if left on full brightness too long. I have no problems with it at 40% since I use it inside most of the time. At max brightness it is clear in sunlight.
I got my LG G3 for $300 unlocked no contract from amazon. I love the 2k (2560 x 1440) QHD (Quad HD) screen. A 1080p screen is just a tiny bit too small for proper manga reading.
Kodi (XBMC) for videos, Moon+ reader for manga and books, and ROOT Xposed Installer+App Settings for the ability to change DPI of each app individually. Make use of all that pixel density by making the text as small as possible! The default user interface can break from changing the entire phone's DPI setting, but that is something all default android software on most devices has problems with.
An important one is something to counter a specific flaw of the LG G3 audio. LG thought it would be a great feature to add predictive software to guess whether you are plugging in speakers or headphones to the audio jack. It does this by measuring the resistance of the speaker. Unfortunately not all speakers and headphones have the same resistance, resulting in the audio being too quiet on most setups. Requires root.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.laransoft.volumeG3&hl=en
edit- here's the latest version of App settings (last I checked), a new developer took over on it. http://forum.xda-developers.com/xposed/modules/mod-app-settings-v1-9-2014-05-14-t2437377/post63835421#post63835421
there is a volume boost app. It specifically was written for the lg g3. I have it installed. Moment..
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.laransoft.volumeG3
rerun it everytime you update your rom. Running cm13 nightlies. [Rerun your busybox installer, too.] Should cover it.
Use this, you need root. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.laransoft.volumeG3
Make sure to make a screen shot to remember the default values. It is very sensible. I would not recommend cracking it over ~~+10~~ +5 (actually, it is even more sensible)
Not sure if this works on MM or your ROM but maybe try this: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.laransoft.volumeG3
there's an app on the play store called volume boost for LG G3 that let's you adjust this
Agreed. The only way to fix this is to install LG G3 Volume Booster from the Play store. You'll need to be rooted. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.laransoft.volumeG3