Jim Lewis
Well-known member
- First Name
- Jim
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2023
- Threads
- 45
- Messages
- 874
- Reaction score
- 764
- Location
- San Antonio, TX
- Vehicles
- Honda Accord 2017; 2023 Lariat ER
- Occupation
- Retired
- Thread starter
- #1
Hi, @Ford Motor Company
Here's something pretty basic that doesn't work right and shouldn't be too hard to fix. It's a problem with iOS 17.x (and probably earlier iOS versions on the iPhone) and may be an Android problem, too.
I describe this as a problem for a hearing aid wearer (me), but since modern BT hearing aids are akin to a special form of earbud, earbud wearers in or near their trucks may encounter the same hangups, too.
My truck is parked in a garage built into our house, abutting the kitchen. I spend a lot of time sitting around the kitchen table, about 10 to 15 feet from my truck.
What happens every now and again is that the truck grabs my Bluetooth audio output from my iPhone, even though I am a 78-year-old hearing aid wearer and have the iPhone accessibility settings to ALWAYS route iPhone audio output to my hearing aids (I guess Ford and/or Apple decided to ignore what a hearing-impaired user might want, override that setting, and let the truck commandeer the BT audio output regardless).
It could be that what happened tonight is that I went to the garage, got into the truck to check something, and then went back into the kitchen. Hours later, in the kitchen, the truck still had a firm hold on my BT audio output from my iPhone.
What happened next is even better. I went to dictate some task notes using any of the several phone keyboards I have on my iPhone. Nothing happened in response to my voice dictation. The keyboard microphone appeared but didn't ding with the usual "I'm ready" noise, and no words appeared as I spoke to the phone. I was baffled. I rummaged through all sorts of iPhone settings. I tried dictating a Voice Memo. Nothing. I tried playing a previously recorded Voice Memo. Nothing. I tried playing a podcast. Nothing. When I finally looked at the Apple Podcast Player audio output settings, I saw that "Ford F-150 Lightning" is checked as the selected BT audio sink. Apparently, any audio I tried playing in the kitchen went to the truck's speakers in the garage. I presume the same was true for dictation. It was being sent to the truck's speakers, I would bet, rather than whatever voice recognition software is behind the keyboards I was using (Apple, Swiftkey, Gboard, Grammarly).
I never consciously switched my BT audio connection to the truck. The truck just grabbed a hold of it when I was nearby and never let go of it.
The truck should be smart enough to know I'm not in it. It has the BlueCruise cameras and seems to have seat sensors that automatically choose driver-focused AC/heat or not, depending on who's in the truck in what seat. The sensors ought to be employed to tell the stupid BT system that, "HEY, no one's in the truck. Let go of the BT audio. Give it back to the iPhone...." And, oh, yeah. There were those intrusion sensors that Ford had to remove from the 2023 Lightnings due to chip shortages and poor planning. It's too bad for that, or those sensors could also have been used to inform the BT audio system that no one's in the truck and it's high time to release a BT audio grip on personal devices. Perhaps Ford audio designers only have garages more than 40 feet away from any room in their houses???
The same oddball behavior is basically true of Apple CarPlay. That's why I always turn it off under the iPhone settings when I get out of my truck parked in the garage. Otherwise, if I'm in the kitchen, Apple CarPlay may commandeer my Wi-Fi connectivity and screw up my phone connecting with APs in my house.
Here's something pretty basic that doesn't work right and shouldn't be too hard to fix. It's a problem with iOS 17.x (and probably earlier iOS versions on the iPhone) and may be an Android problem, too.
I describe this as a problem for a hearing aid wearer (me), but since modern BT hearing aids are akin to a special form of earbud, earbud wearers in or near their trucks may encounter the same hangups, too.
My truck is parked in a garage built into our house, abutting the kitchen. I spend a lot of time sitting around the kitchen table, about 10 to 15 feet from my truck.
What happens every now and again is that the truck grabs my Bluetooth audio output from my iPhone, even though I am a 78-year-old hearing aid wearer and have the iPhone accessibility settings to ALWAYS route iPhone audio output to my hearing aids (I guess Ford and/or Apple decided to ignore what a hearing-impaired user might want, override that setting, and let the truck commandeer the BT audio output regardless).
It could be that what happened tonight is that I went to the garage, got into the truck to check something, and then went back into the kitchen. Hours later, in the kitchen, the truck still had a firm hold on my BT audio output from my iPhone.
What happened next is even better. I went to dictate some task notes using any of the several phone keyboards I have on my iPhone. Nothing happened in response to my voice dictation. The keyboard microphone appeared but didn't ding with the usual "I'm ready" noise, and no words appeared as I spoke to the phone. I was baffled. I rummaged through all sorts of iPhone settings. I tried dictating a Voice Memo. Nothing. I tried playing a previously recorded Voice Memo. Nothing. I tried playing a podcast. Nothing. When I finally looked at the Apple Podcast Player audio output settings, I saw that "Ford F-150 Lightning" is checked as the selected BT audio sink. Apparently, any audio I tried playing in the kitchen went to the truck's speakers in the garage. I presume the same was true for dictation. It was being sent to the truck's speakers, I would bet, rather than whatever voice recognition software is behind the keyboards I was using (Apple, Swiftkey, Gboard, Grammarly).
I never consciously switched my BT audio connection to the truck. The truck just grabbed a hold of it when I was nearby and never let go of it.
The truck should be smart enough to know I'm not in it. It has the BlueCruise cameras and seems to have seat sensors that automatically choose driver-focused AC/heat or not, depending on who's in the truck in what seat. The sensors ought to be employed to tell the stupid BT system that, "HEY, no one's in the truck. Let go of the BT audio. Give it back to the iPhone...." And, oh, yeah. There were those intrusion sensors that Ford had to remove from the 2023 Lightnings due to chip shortages and poor planning. It's too bad for that, or those sensors could also have been used to inform the BT audio system that no one's in the truck and it's high time to release a BT audio grip on personal devices. Perhaps Ford audio designers only have garages more than 40 feet away from any room in their houses???
The same oddball behavior is basically true of Apple CarPlay. That's why I always turn it off under the iPhone settings when I get out of my truck parked in the garage. Otherwise, if I'm in the kitchen, Apple CarPlay may commandeer my Wi-Fi connectivity and screw up my phone connecting with APs in my house.
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