Hi all,
I know there's a lot of posting already on NRR ratings, the NRR - 7 / 2 calculation, and all that. But after reading everything online, and everything on the board, I'm still confused. Which likely means others are too... so can someone explain this all to me once and for all?
Here's what I know so far:
*NRR is the US metric; SNR is the EU metric.
* NRR goes up to 33 dB max; SNR appears to have no posted max rating (can anyone confirm?)
* NRR isn't accurate, and needs to be recalculates via that NRR - 7 / 2 formula; However, I can find *nothing anywhere* to suggest that SNR values require the same treatment. Can anyone confirm?
* NRR values are "laboratory values", while SNR values are "real world" values by untrained testers (and this ostensibly explains why NRR ratings get reduced and SNR ratings do not). Can anyone confirm?
* SNR values further come with an HML (high/med/low) metric that breaks attenuation into specific frequencies; NRR is just a global (and thus inaccurate) metric.
Now for the questions that I'm hoping someone can help with:
1. Everything online, including reputable safety equipment and workplace safety websites, indicates that SNR values *can* be trusted to dampen dBs by the rated value. Is this true? Does anyone know for sure??
2. If SNR and NRR values are both ratings of sound attenuation, as measured in decibels (i.e. they are on the same scale), why do they differ?
It seems like we have two rating scales that differ *drastically* regarding what they are suggesting. For instance, my EarPeace plugs (which I love for low level protection) have an NRR rating of 14 dB, and an SNR rating of 20 dB. If I trust the NRR rating, these plugs provide only 14 dB - 7 / 2 = 3.5 dB of protection (which is completely implausible). But if I trust the SNR rating, I get a full 20 dB of protection (which may also be implausible, but seems closer to the truth, by subjective experience).
So which is it? 3.5 dB or 20 dB? Can anyone clarify?
I know there's a lot of posting already on NRR ratings, the NRR - 7 / 2 calculation, and all that. But after reading everything online, and everything on the board, I'm still confused. Which likely means others are too... so can someone explain this all to me once and for all?
Here's what I know so far:
*NRR is the US metric; SNR is the EU metric.
* NRR goes up to 33 dB max; SNR appears to have no posted max rating (can anyone confirm?)
* NRR isn't accurate, and needs to be recalculates via that NRR - 7 / 2 formula; However, I can find *nothing anywhere* to suggest that SNR values require the same treatment. Can anyone confirm?
* NRR values are "laboratory values", while SNR values are "real world" values by untrained testers (and this ostensibly explains why NRR ratings get reduced and SNR ratings do not). Can anyone confirm?
* SNR values further come with an HML (high/med/low) metric that breaks attenuation into specific frequencies; NRR is just a global (and thus inaccurate) metric.
Now for the questions that I'm hoping someone can help with:
1. Everything online, including reputable safety equipment and workplace safety websites, indicates that SNR values *can* be trusted to dampen dBs by the rated value. Is this true? Does anyone know for sure??
2. If SNR and NRR values are both ratings of sound attenuation, as measured in decibels (i.e. they are on the same scale), why do they differ?
It seems like we have two rating scales that differ *drastically* regarding what they are suggesting. For instance, my EarPeace plugs (which I love for low level protection) have an NRR rating of 14 dB, and an SNR rating of 20 dB. If I trust the NRR rating, these plugs provide only 14 dB - 7 / 2 = 3.5 dB of protection (which is completely implausible). But if I trust the SNR rating, I get a full 20 dB of protection (which may also be implausible, but seems closer to the truth, by subjective experience).
So which is it? 3.5 dB or 20 dB? Can anyone clarify?