I'm working on a project to convert an old Bluetooth earbud into a wireless speaker by connecting it to a PAM8403 Class‑D amplifier. The earbud’s capacitive touch sensor (a metal pad which normally lets you pause/play or trigger Google Assistant) is causing problems—it activates unexpectedly when I connect the PAM8403. I don’t need the touch functionality for this project.
What I've tried so far:
- I attempted to load the sensor by placing 4 Ω resistors in parallel, but that approach didn’t prevent the false triggering.
- I suspect the issue arises because the amplifier’s switching or grounding effects are altering the sensor’s electrical environment.
My questions are:
- Is there a recommended hardware modification (such as adding a pull‑down resistor, shielding, or cutting the sensor’s PCB trace) to effectively disable the capacitive touch sensor without affecting the rest of the audio circuitry?
- Are there any best practices for isolating or filtering the sensor inputs?
Any insights, schematics, or similar project experiences would be greatly appreciated!
The capacitive touch pad is on the bottom left corner of the first picture 


