I was at a charity black tie ball a few months back set around a James Bond theme. Near the end of the meal as we were on our deserts a stunt show suddenly started. These ex SAS guys along with Daniel Craig's stunt man from the bond movies came out shooting blanks at each other. The noise behind me was so loud I nearly shot out of my chair, I must have easily took in 6 of the shots before I could get my ear plugs in. It happened suddenly because it was set up to shock people. I knew there was going to be a stunt show but I didn't know they'd just randomly start shooting like they did.
Any way I can report that I was fairly new to my increased T at the time and this event stressed me out big time. I convinced myself all sorts of damage had been done but it turned out fine for me. I had a spike later that evening but not immediately following the shots. I was literally lying in bed really anxious and concerned but it was much about nothing in the end. Looking back now I can see that I really worked myself up a lot more than I really should have.
Anyway I hope you're ok and I'd try not to worry about it too much.
I was fine for the rest of that day, the day after but then on day 3 all hell broke loose. Now day 2 and still not getting better
I was fine for the rest of that day, the day after but then on day 3 all hell broke loose. Now day 2 and still not getting better
Slamming doors..a nightmare. I must have experienced that at least twice each week. The internet will tell you it's around 90 db..but not all doors are the same, right? Sometimes the blast is so loud I really wonder how come it's supposedly so much more silent than a gun shot ? I can't believe that a regular door in a flat has the same db level when it slams as the huge, metal door I have a lot of which at the university for example ..or on the street when I pass by and people slam their staircase doors ( old kind, XVII - XIX century city houses that we have in France ) - one slammed 1 meter away from me yesterday. I also had two huge , metal windows slam behind me twice in my t life. I can't believe it was 90 db. A car door slam can be 90 db. All those I described were definitely louder. That having said, no change in T even if I really hate when that happens and I just wish people paid f..attention and just not slam them! The audiologists will tell you sth like this cannot, generally, cause any damage. You can take a few pills of NAC, vit C and magnesium + a rest for the ears of around 3 days, if you worry a damage might have occurred..Also, if you only hear you old T louder and not a new sound, the chances of it settling back are even bigger. Keep us posted.
I also had two huge , metal windows slam behind me twice in my t life. I can't believe it was 90 db. A car door slam can be 90 db. All those I described were definitely louder.
How are you , @valeri ? Did it settle down?
A slamming door is no where near the intensity of a gun shot. A gunshot is around 140db; a shotgun is apparently around 170db.
In scientific terms a handgun has around 15 times more energy to it. Thats around 7 times the sound pressure of a door slamming. A shotgun would carry around 25 times more energy being around 12 times louder.
You have to remember that the decibel scale is logarithmic, so if the energy level in an impact doubles, it will only add 3db to the result. It takes a lot of energy for a single event to be dangerous. Far more than doors slamming. You would have to be extremely unlucky to attain ear damage from something like that happening.
Well put.
I will say, though, that OSHA guidelines for anything under 140db being "safe" for a short time is a bit of a joke. They are way too lenient.
Time seems to be a largely ignored factor, a gunshot etc is considered instantaneous, but what about something that lasts several seconds that's in the 130+ db range?