Got tinnitus in my left ear five years ago due to accidentally standing right next to a speaker that suddenly started blaring out a guitar riff. It is a constant 11 kHz tone that bothers me from time to time, but I have learned to live with it and I sometimes (rarely) even forget that it is there. I suppose there is a bit of sensitivity as well, given that I don't seem to have the same tolerance for loud sounds as other people.
The issue is: I "work" as a volunteer photographer at a sports event when the home team is playing. 5,000-10,000 people. The home and away team fans have until now been sectioned off in opposite corners, which meant that I could just sit in either of the other two corners to get away from the drums.
Starting this season, however, one of those groups have been moved to the middle section behind the goal, making it difficult to sit more than 30-40 feet away from the drums. I tried one game like that with my usual earplugs, but wasn't feeling normal until a day later. Next game, I tried earmuffs, which did help a lot to block out the crowd noise, but it was still extremely uncomfortable because of the drums, which seemed to cut straight through them. Add to that, they made my head feel like it was stuck in a vice. I suppose there are more comfortable models, but I doubt they would reduce the noise more than my cheap ones due to bone conductivity (?)
I am seriously considering quitting my "job" after many years, considering that there is no longer a quiet/safe (?) place for me to sit and thinking that it could make my tinnitus worse if I don't stop. I don't want to be the one who is just waiting for the game to be over while 10,000 people around me are having a party. That being said, I cannot fathom how people can stand so close to the drums, never mind the drummers themselves.
Is the problem really bone conductivity or is there something I can do about it? The noise level is roughly 80-95 dB over the course of two hours, so I should think that a 20-30 dB reduction provided by the earmuffs should bring that within safe levels, but like I said, aside from the physical discomfort of wearing them, the drums still bother me.
The issue is: I "work" as a volunteer photographer at a sports event when the home team is playing. 5,000-10,000 people. The home and away team fans have until now been sectioned off in opposite corners, which meant that I could just sit in either of the other two corners to get away from the drums.
Starting this season, however, one of those groups have been moved to the middle section behind the goal, making it difficult to sit more than 30-40 feet away from the drums. I tried one game like that with my usual earplugs, but wasn't feeling normal until a day later. Next game, I tried earmuffs, which did help a lot to block out the crowd noise, but it was still extremely uncomfortable because of the drums, which seemed to cut straight through them. Add to that, they made my head feel like it was stuck in a vice. I suppose there are more comfortable models, but I doubt they would reduce the noise more than my cheap ones due to bone conductivity (?)
I am seriously considering quitting my "job" after many years, considering that there is no longer a quiet/safe (?) place for me to sit and thinking that it could make my tinnitus worse if I don't stop. I don't want to be the one who is just waiting for the game to be over while 10,000 people around me are having a party. That being said, I cannot fathom how people can stand so close to the drums, never mind the drummers themselves.
Is the problem really bone conductivity or is there something I can do about it? The noise level is roughly 80-95 dB over the course of two hours, so I should think that a 20-30 dB reduction provided by the earmuffs should bring that within safe levels, but like I said, aside from the physical discomfort of wearing them, the drums still bother me.