- Oct 6, 2019
- 67
- Tinnitus Since
- June 2019
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Noise Damage (Music)
Hello everyone, this is my first post, but I've been reading a few threads on and off for a few months. My tinnitus started in June and it's a high frequency tone. It appeared after I bought some over-ear headphones and the bright treble of this particular pair set it off. I'm of the opinion that my use of in-ear headphones for 6 years prior to buying the over-ear set done the damage, and the new pair pushed it over the edge finally. I've had a hearing test and my hearing was reported to be very good in both ears, thankfully.
My question is related to music as I'd like to continue to enjoy it, albeit safely. I simply won't use headphones ever again. As a result I have looked at many speakers and HiFi equipment, and also got to demo some equipment at home. I found some speakers a bit 'bright' in the treble which weren't suitable. Also one pair which I felt my tinnitus reacted to and raised in volume for a short time overnight. The pair I've settled on uses a soft dome tweeter and wood pulp woofers. They sound warm and comfortable to listen to. I'd like to buy these.
My questions really are; How safe is listening to music via speakers? And are there factors relating to sound, outside of volume itself, that need consideration?
For context, I bought a sound pressure level meter (dB Meter) to determine the volume I'm listening to the music at. I sit a meter and a half approx away from the speakers. The meter usually reads between 55dB and about 68dB , with occasional brief spikes at 71dB depending if a high treble producing instrument is being played. I won't ever raise the volume above these levels. I've read that up to 85dB is safe for up to 8 hours, but I'm not sure if this is accurate for someone with damaged ears or not. Again for context, I plan to listen to no more than 45 mins - 1 hour per day max. I'm just not sure if there are any factors I'm not considering that you guys may have insight into, and can share with me to try and make sure I don't make my tinnitus worse? Appreciate any input. Thanks.
My question is related to music as I'd like to continue to enjoy it, albeit safely. I simply won't use headphones ever again. As a result I have looked at many speakers and HiFi equipment, and also got to demo some equipment at home. I found some speakers a bit 'bright' in the treble which weren't suitable. Also one pair which I felt my tinnitus reacted to and raised in volume for a short time overnight. The pair I've settled on uses a soft dome tweeter and wood pulp woofers. They sound warm and comfortable to listen to. I'd like to buy these.
My questions really are; How safe is listening to music via speakers? And are there factors relating to sound, outside of volume itself, that need consideration?
For context, I bought a sound pressure level meter (dB Meter) to determine the volume I'm listening to the music at. I sit a meter and a half approx away from the speakers. The meter usually reads between 55dB and about 68dB , with occasional brief spikes at 71dB depending if a high treble producing instrument is being played. I won't ever raise the volume above these levels. I've read that up to 85dB is safe for up to 8 hours, but I'm not sure if this is accurate for someone with damaged ears or not. Again for context, I plan to listen to no more than 45 mins - 1 hour per day max. I'm just not sure if there are any factors I'm not considering that you guys may have insight into, and can share with me to try and make sure I don't make my tinnitus worse? Appreciate any input. Thanks.