Driving a Loud Car (Mustang) and the Possibility of It Making Tinnitus Worse?

Brandon1994

Member
Author
Nov 1, 2018
23
United States
Tinnitus Since
2018
Cause of Tinnitus
Loud Noise Exposure
Hello everyone, it's that time of the year where I get my Mustang out of storage because where I live we have snow in our winter months.

Anyway I love this car but it's loud, on the outside it has a performance exhaust.

I have a personal decibel reader that I own and when driving it's between 80-85 dB inside the car.

When I get on it full throttle it's around 93 dB on the inside.

I was wondering if I keep driving this car will it eventually make my tinnitus worse?

I don't know if it's overkill but I've been using NRR 33 dB foam plugs and earmuffs at the same time. It seems to cut a lot of the sound down. But with this I can't enjoy this car or even hear the radio at all.

What are your suggestions? I really don't want to sell the car. I don't know if just foam plugs are enough?

I've read that foam plugs stink and don't block a lot of the sound out when it's low frequency which I believe it in this case is.
 
Switch earmuffs to Bose QC35. They are as good as your earmuffs for engine and road noise, and you can play the radio through them. Of course you will still not hear that much from the car, but that is kind of the point, is it not?

I have a old Porsche from the 90's, and it is unfortunately going up on Craigslist this month due to my noise sensitivity.
 
How much is the car worth? I'm asking because if it's worth enough, I would get a quieter vehicle?

I was in a 2014/15 (not sure, which year exactly) SUV and it was so much more quieter than my late 2000s sedan. I wanted to trade vehicles so bad!

I would research which vehicles have a quiet cabin. I think it will make a difference even if it's not major.
 
You can try to use Bose 25 noise-cancelling headphones + plugs. Noise-cancelling headphones have been implicated in people's tinnitus getting louder, so the plugs are there to protect you from NC headphones. You should be able to listen to the radio, as NC headphones ought to cut the low frequency hum.
 
You can try to use Bose 25 noise-cancelling headphones + plugs. Noise-cancelling headphones have been implicated in people's tinnitus getting louder, so the plugs are there to protect you from NC headphones. You should be able to listen to the radio, as NC headphones ought to cut the low frequency hum.
I'm not sure you know what a Mustang puts out, especially with performance exhausts. It's nothing like a hum... it's an earthquake rumble! Nice sounding rumble of course!

Low frequencies travel fairly well (that's why we hear the bass from our neighbor's party through the walls), in particular, through bones (hence the bone conduction tests). I don't know how much actual protection the NC headphones would provide, especially if he drives around for long periods of time (like a road trip).
 
I'm not sure you know what a Mustang puts out, especially with performance exhausts. It's nothing like a hum... it's an earthquake rumble!
Do those cars come with a muffler?
In any case, the safest thing to do would be to give yourself another year to heal. If you don't want to do that, then try driving with protection for 15 minutes and see what impact this has on your tinnitus. If you don't see any worsening, gradually increase your time in the car.

Play it by ear - even if there is no worsening, if it feels like the car is too loud (even with all of the protection), then consider selling the car. A lot is at stake...
 
Yes my setup includes mufflers. It's a dual exhaust setup being a Mustang GT. I was able to drive it today for 30 minutes. With my setup of having 33 dB plugs and earmuffs I don't consider it to be that loud in the car. So far I can't tell if my tinnitus has spiked.
 
Do those cars come with a muffler?

They do, but as the OP stated, it has been modified and now has a performance exhaust, which generally increases the sound volume significantly (due to fewer "muffling obstacles" that the exhaust pressure has to deal with, which increases the performance by allowing the engine to "exhale" better).
 
If you don't want to do that, then try driving with protection for 15 minutes and see what impact this has on your tinnitus. If you don't see any worsening, gradually increase your time in the car.

A progressive approach seems reasonable.
 
Hello everyone, it's that time of the year where I get my Mustang out of storage because where I live we have snow in our winter months.

Anyway I love this car but it's loud, on the outside it has a performance exhaust.

I have a personal decibel reader that I own and when driving it's between 80-85 dB inside the car.

When I get on it full throttle it's around 93 dB on the inside.

I was wondering if I keep driving this car will it eventually make my tinnitus worse?

I don't know if it's overkill but I've been using NRR 33 dB foam plugs and earmuffs at the same time. It seems to cut a lot of the sound down. But with this I can't enjoy this car or even hear the radio at all.

What are your suggestions? I really don't want to sell the car. I don't know if just foam plugs are enough?

I've read that foam plugs stink and don't block a lot of the sound out when it's low frequency which I believe it in this case is.
Hi, I live in Australia and drive a HSV Clubsport - LS 2 engine (similar to the Pontiac G8 if you live in the US). I kept the car but went back to standard HSV mufflers as my ears would vibrate with the noise of a performance exhaust muffler. See how you go when you get the Mustang out of storage. It may make your tinnitus worse as it did mine. Go back to standard mufflers if it's too loud.
 
Reviving an old thread - but I recently got myself a new car at start of July and 2 weeks into ownership I've developed tinnitus.

It's a stock bmw M2, so its not the loudest car but not the quietest either. after some spirited driving in the first week it did give me somewhat of a headache. The car also gives me an ear fullness sensation as well which is something very foreign considering I've driven around 7 different cars in 20 years.

Was hoping to get some advice as I'm really not sure if it's the car itself or possibly something else that has triggered the tinnitus. Would be great to hear from other car enthusiasts with tinnitus.
 
Reviving an old thread - but I recently got myself a new car at start of July and 2 weeks into ownership I've developed tinnitus.

It's a stock bmw M2, so its not the loudest car but not the quietest either. after some spirited driving in the first week it did give me somewhat of a headache. The car also gives me an ear fullness sensation as well which is something very foreign considering I've driven around 7 different cars in 20 years.

Was hoping to get some advice as I'm really not sure if it's the car itself or possibly something else that has triggered the tinnitus. Would be great to hear from other car enthusiasts with tinnitus.
If you have hearing problems do yourself (and the rest of the world) a favour and drive a quiet car, something hybrid or electric. Your ears will feel better.
 
Was hoping to get some advice as I'm really not sure if it's the car itself or possibly something else that has triggered the tinnitus. Would be great to hear from other car enthusiasts with tinnitus.

I'd clock the dB with a meter to make sure it's not something insane, but assuming it's "low end motorcycle / atv" range (say, 78-95db) then I'd probably be happy to drive it with silicone or foam plugs, but not otherwise.

My motorcycle is 88-104db depending on speed; this doesn't bother me with foam plugs under a helmet, but the once in a while I fire it up while I'm working on it indoors I am reminded this is a loud machine.
 

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