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?

 

emergingsoul

The “db Meter Pro” app on my iPhone shows very close to the same readings as my old reliable Radio Shack one. 

Similar to the above posters, also using a Radio Shack meter. "C" weighted, fast response. Measured at the listening seat. Peak levels are almost always between 80 and 85 dB, regardless of genre. Quieter passages are obviously less.

Most music isn't "prolonged levels". There's a big difference between peak levels of music and prolonged levels of constant sound and their effects on ear health.

Well recorded rock music from good bands just starts to come alive at 85db….. Fir that matter, same goes for full symphonic music.
 

What’s the point of big expensive speakers & amps  when at 85 db, you need a watt or two for the average speaker sensitivity ? 
 

My objective is to simulate music as much as possible & that means volume & dynamics!!!  To each his own!