RECORDINGhttp://rainrecording.com  
Our Sponsors
Pro Audio Products

http://www.auralex.com/

The PRO SHOP
Categories
· Accessories
· Acoustic Treatment
· Compressors / Limiters / Gates
· Equalizers
· Micing Systems & Spitters
· Microphones
· Mixers/ Consols
· Modular Rack Systems
· Monitor
· Preamps
· Processors
· Recording Channels
· Summing Amps
Pro Shop
Random Audio Product

vm1
$5,849.00
Members Support
RO CLUB
You are not subscriber of RECORDING. You can subscribe from here now!
User Info, Site Stats
We received
75326033
page views since March 15, 2004
Recording Org
Navigation Map
recording.jpg HomeShow/Hide content
Access restricted to our members Feedback (contact us)
tree-L.gif Recommend Us
· Advertise Here
keyword ads
· Feeds
forums1.jpg DiscussionsShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Forum RULES
tree-T.gif Forum Search
tree-T.gif Your Account
tree-L.gif Lost Password
pronews.gif Business SectionShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif NewsNew content !
tree-T.gif Topics
Access restricted to our members Submit News
Access restricted to our members Advertising InfoShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif keyword adsShow/Hide content
tree-L.gif Pro Audio
Linking System
Access restricted to our members Feedback (contact us)
Access restricted to our members News Search
· The Pro Shop
High End Gear
· Pro Shop!
icon_poll.gif ContentShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Reviews & Features
tree-T.gif Stories Archive
Access restricted to our members Music_Business_Links
icon_members.gif InfoShow/Hide content
fleche.gif Books
tree-T.gif FAQ
Access restricted to our members Feedback (contact us)
fleche.gif Glossary
tree-T.gif Recommend Us
tree-T.gif Statistics
Access restricted to our members News Search
tree-T.gif Surveys
tree-L.gif Your Account
PASS IT ON!
Please link back to RO
Latest Survey
Do you earn money from music?

Yes
No



Results
Polls

Votes: 1232
Comments: 1
Mix News
·PreSonus Sponsors Recording Academy Event
·Neumann, Sennheiser to Introduce New Microphones at AES
·2008 Art of Record Production Conference is Announced
·AES 2008 New Product Submissions
·Propellerhead Supports Bob Moog Foundation with Donation

read more...©
  Forum FAQ    Search    Profile    Log in to check your private messages    Log in
  Your url ad could be here!

 
Post new topicReply to topic
View previous topic Log in to check your private messages View next topic
Author Message
EricWatkins
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Feb 10, 2007
Posts: 154


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 6:06 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Hey guys/gals, I wanted to bring this thread back up. I've been really experiencing the ringing lately. I'm 39 and have been a keyboard/bass player in rock bands for 15 years off and on. Sometimes I wore ear plugs, sometimes not. But now, I am suddenly very aware and am very concerned about what loss I have and how to best prevent further hearing loss. Now I always where hearing protection at gigs and at practice. Our band is very loud, but I dont know how loud in db terms. My question is; Are ear plugs enough to prevent further damage? If not, I think I better just stop being in the band as composing and recording are way more important to me at this point in my life. I wear the foamies and I get them in there really good, to where it really muffles things well, but is that enough for a really loud band. THey are rated at up to 30 db.

Eric
View user's profileSend private message
Link555
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Mar 31, 2007
Posts: 780
Location: North Vancouver


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 8:57 am Reply with quoteBack to top

I read that 85dB at 8 hours is quite safe. However a rock band can be up around 115dB. Assuming the ear plugs are perfect and that they are used correctly (its surprising how many people don't know to insert them) then:

115-30=85dB.


But that’s not at all frequencies!

Most ear plugs act more are like butterworth filters, then an all pass filters. So some frequencies still get through.

Check this page out:
http://www.dangerousdecibels.org/hearingloss.cfm

_________________
Did you Hear that?
www.steller-studios.com
View user's profileSend private messageVisit poster's website
Angstaroo
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Jul 01, 2005
Posts: 55
Location: DeKalb, IL


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Fri Apr 18, 2008 9:10 am Reply with quoteBack to top

zemlin wrote:
I just discovered that my already not-so-hot HF hearing is getting worse. A year or two ago it was rolling off around 12.5K. Now it's down to about 10-10.5K. I'm 45 and was planning to be doing this recording stuff after I retire, but if my hearing is going to keep getting worse, maybe I'm kidding myself. I wrote off selling mastering services due to my hearing - but is it going to get to the point where I'm not even qualified for recording and mixing?

Folks like my work, and since I know my limits, I sometimes call in younger ears for a second opinion. Luckily my younger daughter has good ears for analytical listening. I find it worrisome that my ears are getting significantly worse in a fairly short time - and I use hearing protection whenever I'm doing noisy things and certainly don't blast music when listening.

Sad

I like this business - I'd hate to be forced out due to bad hearing.


I think it’s safe to say that we’re -all- in this same boat. But I thought I’d throw in a couple tidbits.

My hearing has been permanently damaged by two main sources: The drummer I’ve worked with for the last 16 years or so and one minor incident at a crappy bar on the south side of Chicago.

The drummer I’ve been working with hits VERY hard, he’s definitely a power player, and standing next to him has damaged the hearing of every bass player he knows. He used to take pride in this, until he got a taste of his own medicine (more about this below). Nowadays, when I’m around him I’ve got in-ears or earplugs in, it’s a requirement for me to protect what I’ve got left. In 2005, I moved out to a more rural setting and took a bit of a break from the music “business”. Not that I was all that deep into it to begin with, but being two hours away from everything and really trying to settle down and do the family thing took precedence over anything else for a while. At first, I couldn’t go to bed at night without a television, music, -something- making noise. I’m used to living near highways, high traffic areas, guns going off, police sirens, hillbillies’ dogs barking all night, and out here it’s DEAD silence. It’s so quiet, it’s almost like sensory deprivation, and with my level of hearing damage all I hear is a light ringing with a lot of very high frequency hiss. In such a silent area, the ringing and hiss seem magnified to the point of distraction. Now, after about three years it’s not as noticeable to me; either I’ve gotten used to it or my hearing has adjusted to not being punished so often anymore. I tend to think it’s a little of column A and a little of column B. When I go back to my hometown and work with friends on music, my ears fatigue much sooner now, they’re much more sensitive, and I’m much more aware of how much is “pushing it”.

The incident I mentioned was while running sound for our little tribute band at a dive bar called Changes. Low drop ceilings, tile floors, and wood paneled walls made this a -punishing- room for highs and hi-mids. It seemed like everything wanted to make the PA feedback, so I had to really stay on top of it the whole night, no amount of ringing out the PA would solve the problem. At one point, the guitarist was setting up his rig and had gotten an ear-splitting burst of feedback because of his wah pedal. I thought it was the PA and ran up to the stage to kill the monitors, which happened to be right next to his amp. As I crouched down to try and figure out the problem, he made it do it again. I didn’t hear out of my left ear for the rest of that night. Since then, it’s -very- sensitive to high frequencies, volume, air pressure differences, you name it. Before that point, I never had pain before from the hearing damage I received, just the tell-tale ring later on in the evening. That night was the beginning of many difficulties I’ve had with my left ear since then. Moral of the story? It’s always the guitar player’s fault.Wink

The drummer I mentioned played a show up on the north side of the city a few years ago. For monitoring purposes, the club had an old PA cabinet with a 15" and a horn positioned right next to the drummer. Being able to hear yourself onstage in Chicago is a super-rare luxury, but apparently this PA cabinet had a blown horn. By the third song, the drummer couldn’t stand the noise anymore and had the soundman kill the monitor altogether, but the damage was done. He suffered a serious loss of hearing, had troubles with pain and vertigo for weeks afterwards, sought the advice of at least three different doctors, tried homeopathic remedies, and even looked into hyperbaric chamber therapy somewhere in Canada. He wears an earplug in that ear all of the time now, (although not pushed in all of the way) merely because it is overly sensitive to loud noises. He swears by these homeopathic anti-tinnitus eardrops he picked up somewhere, and the ringing and vertigo have dissipated to the point of tolerance.

So, basically you’ve got two people who have suffered some pretty serious hearing damage who have had our conditions improve within three years. Our hearing will degrade faster than most people’s, and we’ll never hear things the same way we used to, but hearing damage isn’t a death sentence. The body has remarkable healing abilities, combined with a remarkable ability to adapt to new situations. Take care of your hearing, ALWAYS have earplugs with you when you’re going to be around loud noises, take breaks when you’re wearing headphones or working on music for long periods of time, don’t crank your iPod with in-ears in, get a pair of closed-ear headphones if background noise is a problem (the Bose noise cancelling headphones are awesome for this), and above all, be aware and observant when it comes to your hearing. If you feel your ears getting fatigued, if you know they’re going to be ringing later, if you know the volume level is pretty high, get out, take a break, put some earplugs in, -do something proactive-.
View user's profileSend private messageVisit poster's websiteAIM AddressYahoo MessengerMSN Messenger
Display posts from previous:      
Post new topicReply to topic
View previous topic Log in to check your private messages View next topic



This topic sponsored by:

  Sound Performance Lab
(Tube, Mastering, Analog Gear)

  
  
  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



Powered by phpBB © 2001 phpBB Group

PHP-Nuke Port by Tom Nitzschner [Total Redesign By: Lorkan Themes] & 2004 www.toms-home.com
Pro Shop Cart
Your cart is empty.

[ Browse ]
Business Section
(News, Articles
Classifieds etc.)
· Win a 64-bit Mobile Studio from Rain Recording, Cakewalk and PreSonus
· Recording Connection
· BTE Audio releases BEQ5 British Console Equaliser Algorithm
· Warm Sound Engineering, Looking for the tape sound? We have the solution!
· Producer/Engineer Denny Bridges Joins East Coast Recording Company
· Vocalbooth.com™ Provides Working Studio for VOICE 2008
· BTE Audio releases BEQ4 British Console Equaliser Algorithm
· The audioMIDI.com Film & TV Composition Clinic

[ More in News Section ]
Current Topics!
Last 10 Forum Messages

Should I buy a mixer?
Last post by kdk69 in Recording Forum on Sep 07, 2008 at 22:46:40

New KEL microphone: HM-7U
Last post by blaumph2cool in Budget Gear on Sep 07, 2008 at 22:31:04

recording.org product giveaway
Last post by Greener in Pro Sound Chat on Sep 07, 2008 at 22:14:14

Another Live Mix
Last post by Greener in Song & Mix Critique on Sep 07, 2008 at 22:09:25

Sound quality "issues"...
Last post by Greener in Recording Forum on Sep 07, 2008 at 22:01:39

Is this an acceptable sound?
Last post by Greener in Song & Mix Critique on Sep 07, 2008 at 21:50:42

Busted
Last post by Space in Song & Mix Critique on Sep 07, 2008 at 21:13:54

How do you Choose a Mixer/Console?
Last post by ray1018 in Pro Audio Gear on Sep 07, 2008 at 20:33:05

How do you Choose a Mixer/Console?
Last post by ray1018 in Mixing Live Sound on Sep 07, 2008 at 20:33:05

Crown XTi4000 for Bose 802 III series
Last post by ray1018 in Pro Audio Gear on Sep 07, 2008 at 19:39:16


[ RECORDING ]
New Topics!

Sound quality "issues"...
How do you Choose a Mixer/Console?
How do you Choose a Mixer/Console?
Crown XTi4000 for Bose 802 III series
What volume should I mix at?
Quick sample and some thoughts
Meyer HD-1 Speakers?
Confused on which overhead mics to purchase
Studio Sale
CAD E-350 vs. Cad Trion 8000
mid field monitoring
preamp suggestion
Howto: Tune A Guitar
help with new pro studio
Is this an acceptable sound?
Need Help With Setup
Another Live Mix
The difference between mastering one song or a whole album
Beat Detective-ish question...

RECORDING Forums

BookMark

 _MAKEBOOKMARK

Recording Org RSS Feeds Community News. or Pro Audio Forums

Read this if you are a new poster Rules, who needs em?

For more information on advertising, investing , merging or any other ideas you may have for this community" Feedback

Pro Audio forums, audio reviews and all the moderating here is volunteer. Please remember no-one is being paid to be here or deliver hot coffee. Play Fair, be polite, patient and considerate to others. Title your topics properly and do not slander anyone, ever online. Also, if you love Recording Org and would like to make any donation in support of this site, please contact the Feedback link on the side bar. RO admin would be more than happy to add any contribution gift to the RO kitty. Give by becoming an RO Club Member and get a little better RO options.
Read this before your post here: Recording Org Disclaimer


This site can be translated into 13 languages. 錄音工作室幫助下,新聞和信息,數位專業音頻論壇, Opname studio helpen, nieuws en informatie, digitale pro audio forums, Studio d'enregistrement à l'aide de nouvelles et d'information, forums de l'audio numérique pro, Tonstudio helfen, Nachrichten und Informationen, digitale Pro-Audio-Foren, Estudio de grabación ayuda, información y noticias, foros de audio digital profesional. help, pro tools, cubase, nuendo, DAW, Music Education, Arranging, Composing,
PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2005 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.
Page Generation: 0.49 Seconds

.: fiSubBrown Shadow phpbb2 style by Lorkan Themes :.
.: Original Theme (FiSubSilver Shadow) by: Daz 2004 :.