My friends laughed at me when, even in the 60's and 70's I'd put earplugs in ... when I'd go to a concert. Who's laughing now?
Same here!
I actually walked out of a Who concert. It was so loud it was physically uncomfortable.
Are your listening levels healthy? Doing damage?
Do you know decibel levels when listening to your system, and how loud do you go?
Since upgrading my system, again, I find my listening levels have tended to increase. Not because I'm slowly going deaf but because it's more enjoyable.
I measured the decibel level with a few iPad Apps, and there was lots of disparity. Plus or minus 25 dB.
Certainly if it's too loud I sense things are not healthy but I'd really like to know how loud things are since Google tells me prolonged listening above 70 dB could be damaging my hearing.
The apps on an iPad are clearly unreliable and now I have to contemplate spending several hundred dollars for a sound meter as well as a calibration device so I can know what my limits are and so I can be in compliance with Google.
Anyone know a good sound meter, and do most serious listeners get one of these things?
@moonwatcher Other schools of thought...for sure, and overexposure isn’t the only cause. I have a friend with significant hearing loss and tinnitus from anti-depressants. How ironic is that? Made him WAY more depressed. Stress...it’s not stress alone that can exacerbate tinnitus but the associated physiological effects of stress, like BP, heart rate, tension etc. which is what I meant - so 100% I agree stress can make it worse. Competing school of thought - yep, but, if you have documented hearing loss is pretty safe to assume the tinnitus is related. My hearing loss is mostly between 500-6000 Hz. My tinnitus is quite high pitched. However there is no way to actually measure the frequency of the tinnitus tone that I am aware of. You mentioned your hearing rolls of at 12 Khz - the audiometers I’ve been tested only test from 250-8000Hz? No treatments, therapeutics are 100% snake oil, nothing on the horizon. Hearing aids are not a path I’m willing to try either atm, and my friend I mentioned did go down that path and basically wasted $8K. There is potential for an implanted device, but unfortunately it is being applied to a more lucrative disorder atm. I know the inventor, I’ll be discussing this further with him shortly. I am curious though; what would a good quality hearing aid do to the sound of my system? My guess is I would no longer be actually listening to my speakers...thoughts? Lastly, if you hear of a clinical trial please let me know. |
@macg19 The only legitimate treatment I've seen undergoing clinical trials is the Lenire tinnitus treatment from Neuromod that got FDA NeNovo Approval, by using bimodal neuromodulation to significantly reduce tinnitus symptoms. |
@moonwatcher Thanks for the reply.
Probably - but I compensated with speakers that have very good mid-range I just need the volume loud enough so that the majority of the music drowns out the tinnitus - which makes listening to classical music nearly impossible but that genre isn't my fave anyway. You hang in there too. |
A couple of points. IPhone apps can be quite accurate, as they all are calibrated to the same standard. Android phones, unfortunately, are not. On my Samsung I had to use a 15dB! Sensitivity adjustment to match a calibrated sound level meter. +1 for having a sound level meter. On OSHA standards, be aware they are based on minimizing hearing loss related to speech intelligibility, and so do not consider loss above 8kHz. So high frequency loss is still possible while staying within their exposure limits.
I typically listen with 75-80 dB peaks measured with fast dBC settings.
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