- Nov 17, 2020
- 74
- Tinnitus Since
- 2008, then 2020
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Noise exposure
I have tried reading up on the occlusion effect lately, and one especially good paper I have found about it:
http://www.protectear.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/earlog19.pdf
However, when I measured the physical volumes of the largest ear protector I have (and know about), the Peltor X5A, I found that the free inside volume, the volume not occupied by foam inside the muff (yellow space in my drawing under), was only about 100cm^3.
When I measured the outer volume, that means the volume of the empty inside space + the foam + the outer plastic shell (yellow+grey space+black lines in the drawing), I found it to be about 400cm^3.
Because the paper says that an "occluded volume" of about 300cm^3, I wonder witch one of my measurements are what people mean when they talk about "occluded volume". In short, is the foam to be included in the volume measurement or only free space/air?
I have seen this term "occluded volume" be used also in other papers, but does anyone know how it is measured correctly?
http://www.protectear.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/earlog19.pdf
However, when I measured the physical volumes of the largest ear protector I have (and know about), the Peltor X5A, I found that the free inside volume, the volume not occupied by foam inside the muff (yellow space in my drawing under), was only about 100cm^3.
When I measured the outer volume, that means the volume of the empty inside space + the foam + the outer plastic shell (yellow+grey space+black lines in the drawing), I found it to be about 400cm^3.
Because the paper says that an "occluded volume" of about 300cm^3, I wonder witch one of my measurements are what people mean when they talk about "occluded volume". In short, is the foam to be included in the volume measurement or only free space/air?
I have seen this term "occluded volume" be used also in other papers, but does anyone know how it is measured correctly?