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On Sat, 03 Jul 2004 18:41:00 GMT, Richard Clark
wrote: Let's take that same 92dB @ 1M @ 1 Watt and compare to the several reports of hi-Z headsets. The first translation is of course against application. Headphones encompass far less distance than 1M. I will arbitrarily assign a path link of 1cM for the ear canal and re-specify my Pioneer speakers to 112dB @ 1W (basically with the ear pressed next to the speaker cone). Should be 132dB @ 1W - which, of course, does nothing to the spread of reported responses. However, even this correction is fraught with error because it presumes a free field (violated at the ear canal where it becomes a pressure field) - well, such are the pitfalls of computing with sound. For those seriously interested in the Physics of sound, vibration, and its measurement, the preeminent authority in this field is in Denmark with Brüel and Kjær: http://www.bksv.com/pdf/Sound_Intensity.pdf who offer microphones that can pick up sound 40dB below the threshold of hearing. By the way, one of the interesting points about their anechoic chambers is mention that if you sat in one, you could hear your heart beating (and this not just simply the blood pumping through veins near the ears - which are self canceling anyway). 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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