1-2 of 2 Answers
Your TV is following the logic of "if something is plugged into the headphone jack, that means the user is using headphones and does not want the TV speakers on." For TVs that have this logic, the easiest way to get around this is to use one of the other audio outputs on your TV, such as the Digital Optical Audio Out. This will allow you to send the audio signal to the wireless transmitter for your headphones AND have the TV speakers on at the same time. Also, some TVs that follow the aforementioned logic have an option in the audio menu to allow the speakers and headphones to be on at the same time, but this option has been getting increasingly rare so the solution above (using a different audio port) is more likely to do what you want.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.When you plug it in you have to press mute to not have the noise on the tv & only in the headphones.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.
