An Mp3 is a data file so it is unlikely that it "lost it's sound" unless it somehow became corrupt. I would suggest checking your speakers, headphones or output jack.
well you should go on the voice selection and click double sound then it will work
You push down the wheel a push up or down to change the vol.
Sound quality in an MP3 player is mostly related to the quality or bit rate at which the MP3 was made.In general the MP3 is not recommended by audiophiles because it loses sound quality.Therefore no MP3 gives you really good sound quality except when using the highest quality MP3 music files.
aacplus is the best
.mp3
Magnets
NO
mp3 conversion qualityThe quality is lost. Music is just a sound wave, and converting it to a lower bps mp3 format does not keep all of the data of the original file. Therefore, the data is lost and converting the mp3 to a higher bps does nothing to improve the quality. Unless you convert a wave file into what is called mp3PRO (Codig Technologies, Fraunfofer IIS and Thomson multimedia), there is no way to recover the lost quality. mp3Pro encoding will add a small amount of information to the file so that an mp3PRO decoder can reconstruct the lost higher frequencies. Non mp3PRO decoders will still act as regular mp3 without the enhancement.
i am afraid to say not all the times you can fix them sorry i had a RCA mp3 player and i tried to fix it but couldn't cause sometimes when they are broke they are no good sorry but it might me broke i am so sorry
Some of the cheaper MP3 players do sound very good. The Go-Gear Aria has great sound at a very low price.
mp3 players audio and sound systems
what is the answer