- Aug 21, 2020
- 82
- Tinnitus Since
- 8/2020
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Earwax syringing removal
Hi. I a bit confused about wind noise, the occlusion effect, and bone conduction.
I'm a mountain biker and went on a short ride on a very easy trail last week for the first time since my tinnitus started.
I have a Giro Switchblade full face helmet and taped up some holes in the ear area to prevent wind noise from getting to the ear. There was still some degree of wind noise and I noticed I was able to hear my tinnitus outdoors (normally I can't) even after the short 7 minute descent. Luckily the spike was just temporary.
This weekend, to try to improve wind noise reduction, I'm going to test my EarPeace SNR 17 / NRR 11 (musician style ones with the hole in the center). They are also advertised towards motorcyclists to reduce wind noise.
My concern is, from reading these boards, I heard that the occlusion effect is a problem with earplugs. Is this only a problem if you are speaking or singing loudly? Would heavy breathing cause this too? And also, is the point of the hole in middle on those musician plugs (as opposed to fully sealed foam ones) to reduce some of this occlusion effect?
The other concern is: does bone conduction (is this just vibration?) get enhanced at all through wearing earplugs?
Since my earplugs have different filter levels, is it maybe a good idea to just use the lowest one to reach a compromise between all these different issues? I also own Earaser plugs which have an even lower NRR 5 rating.
I also wonder, since mountain biking descents are fairly short (5-7 minutes and I'll take breaks if they're longer), is this even such a big deal compared to the kind of long sustained wind noise from road cycling or motorcycling?
I'm a mountain biker and went on a short ride on a very easy trail last week for the first time since my tinnitus started.
I have a Giro Switchblade full face helmet and taped up some holes in the ear area to prevent wind noise from getting to the ear. There was still some degree of wind noise and I noticed I was able to hear my tinnitus outdoors (normally I can't) even after the short 7 minute descent. Luckily the spike was just temporary.
This weekend, to try to improve wind noise reduction, I'm going to test my EarPeace SNR 17 / NRR 11 (musician style ones with the hole in the center). They are also advertised towards motorcyclists to reduce wind noise.
My concern is, from reading these boards, I heard that the occlusion effect is a problem with earplugs. Is this only a problem if you are speaking or singing loudly? Would heavy breathing cause this too? And also, is the point of the hole in middle on those musician plugs (as opposed to fully sealed foam ones) to reduce some of this occlusion effect?
The other concern is: does bone conduction (is this just vibration?) get enhanced at all through wearing earplugs?
Since my earplugs have different filter levels, is it maybe a good idea to just use the lowest one to reach a compromise between all these different issues? I also own Earaser plugs which have an even lower NRR 5 rating.
I also wonder, since mountain biking descents are fairly short (5-7 minutes and I'll take breaks if they're longer), is this even such a big deal compared to the kind of long sustained wind noise from road cycling or motorcycling?