Listening to music goes smoothly – until the connection cuts out right at the best part of the track. Sound familiar? Bluetooth dropouts are annoying, but rarely serious. Most often the cause is something quite ordinary.
Why does the connection drop?
Bluetooth is radio technology, and radio waves have their own limitations. The most common reasons for dropouts:
- Interference from the environment – Wi‑Fi routers, microwave ovens and other Bluetooth devices compete for the same frequency band. Interference is especially common in crowded offices and trains.
- Too much distance – Bluetooth 5.0 theoretically reaches 10 meters, but walls and a phone in a pocket reduce the range.
- Outdated software – The phone's or the headphones' firmware version may include known Bluetooth bugs.
- Too many paired devices – If the headphones are trying to switch between two devices, the connection may jump.
How to fix it
- Reset Bluetooth pairing – Remove the headphones completely from the phone's Bluetooth list. Turn off the headphones, start them in pairing mode, and connect from scratch.
- Keep the phone close – Try keeping the phone on the same side of your body as the headphones. A pocket or bag attenuates the signal a surprising amount.
- Update the firmware – Check Valco's website to see if an update is available for your headphones. Updates often fix connection issues.
- Reduce interference – If the problem always occurs in the same place (office, train station), the cause is likely environmental interference. Try a different location.
- Remove unnecessary pairings – If the headphones are paired with many devices, remove the ones you don't use actively.
If this doesn't help
If the connection still drops after resetting and updating, contact Valco customer support. Sometimes it may be a hardware fault that requires service. In your message, include the headphone model, phone model, and the situations in which the issue occurs – it will speed up troubleshooting considerably.
Bluetooth technology has indeed advanced tremendously in recent years, but radio waves are still radio waves. They don't care that you're right at the best part of a song.
