- Oct 6, 2019
- 67
- Tinnitus Since
- June 2019
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Noise Damage (Music)
I bought a digital streamer and speakers recently. I'd borrowed both from a HiFi shop a few months after getting tinnitus. I decided to give up headphones and wanted to use speakers instead to allow the leaks in music to dissipate before reaching my ears.
I purchased a set of the speakers, and I purchased the streamer (which was the same model but was a 2nd generation which had a new DAC... which is a digital audio converter).
The set that I borrowed I found didn't raise the tone/volume of my tinnitus. But the stuff I borrowed seems to a little.
The DAC in the steamer is from the same company so I'd think that this would be similar to the previous version. The speakers are new and they say it can take 100 hours for new speakers to 'bed in'. And the speaker cable is different but is oxygen free copper so I would think this would be fine. I'm not listening to a high volume (I use a dB meter to keep track). The sound coming from the speakers doesn't sound 'bright'... quite the opposite. They sound warm and non fatiguing.
Does anyone have any experience of this or any advice? I'm not planning to listen to music a whole lot but certainly a couple times a week. Maybe just at weekends. I'm thinking I have hyperacusis/reactive tinnitus. If I keep listening will this further damage my tinnitus? I've read that music is supposed to help so I'm hoping I can keep going with enjoying music. From the dB reader I'm listening to the level between 47dB and 60dB. I'm aware that there can be an ~8dB discrepancy with these readers so I'm thinking this is still in a good ball park for 'safe' volume.
I purchased a set of the speakers, and I purchased the streamer (which was the same model but was a 2nd generation which had a new DAC... which is a digital audio converter).
The set that I borrowed I found didn't raise the tone/volume of my tinnitus. But the stuff I borrowed seems to a little.
The DAC in the steamer is from the same company so I'd think that this would be similar to the previous version. The speakers are new and they say it can take 100 hours for new speakers to 'bed in'. And the speaker cable is different but is oxygen free copper so I would think this would be fine. I'm not listening to a high volume (I use a dB meter to keep track). The sound coming from the speakers doesn't sound 'bright'... quite the opposite. They sound warm and non fatiguing.
Does anyone have any experience of this or any advice? I'm not planning to listen to music a whole lot but certainly a couple times a week. Maybe just at weekends. I'm thinking I have hyperacusis/reactive tinnitus. If I keep listening will this further damage my tinnitus? I've read that music is supposed to help so I'm hoping I can keep going with enjoying music. From the dB reader I'm listening to the level between 47dB and 60dB. I'm aware that there can be an ~8dB discrepancy with these readers so I'm thinking this is still in a good ball park for 'safe' volume.