He has also been published in print for Macworld, including cover stories. Oliver Haslam has written about Apple and the wider technology business for more than a decade with bylines on How-To Geek, PC Mag, iDownloadBlog, and many more. Shout out in the comments and let me know if this works for you – good luck! It isn't going to work for everyone, but any hope is better than no hope, right? Thankfully everyone who is having this problem is still covered by AppleCare – AirPods Pro haven't been around all that long yet – but given the difficulty in getting a replacement pair of earbuds some might face, I'm sharing this tip. I have enlisted the help of one person who has been having the same problem but it didn't work for them. I can't test this for myself because my AirPods Pro earbuds are fine and my wife's are now brand new. But I'm no sound engineer and I've definitely never played one on TV, either. That then prevents it from picking up a proper signal and causes chaos with the ANC. My guess is that I was on to something with my microphone theory and this method clears the debris that fills the grille protecting it. Then you take a can of compressed air and carefully, not directly, blow at the grilles.After 10-20 times, the tape should come off much more cleaner (less marks) than before.Also, when you apply the sticky tape, it should be completely clean, so no sticking the same part over and over. Doing it multiple times, fast and at the angle works better than just sticking it hard and removing. You apply the sticky tape on the mesh to remove some particles and traces of ear wax.Airpods Pro Zoomed Showing Debris (Image credit: Nikita Goryainov)
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