The occlusion effect worries me. I never knew much about it before until someone mentioned it on here. I did always wonder when wearing ear plugs if the sound of my voice being louder was causing damage.
Are there any people who are very knowledgeable of it on here? For example, when at football matches, I wear ear plugs and often talk to my Dad next to me or if I go to a restaurant etc. Based on the background noise being about 90db, according to Wikipedia, the occlusion effect adds on as much as 20db. So, if speaking at 95db to be able to be heard by the other person, the ears are being exposed to as high as 115db. This seems crazy and surely defeats the point of plugs in some situations.
When at the football, when we score, I, as well as everybody else shouts/yells in excitement. With ear plugs in, I must expose my self to very loud noise! As I guess a yell could be 100db+ , so over 120db with ear plugs in - very worrying.
Link to Wikipedia page - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occlusion_effect
Any thoughts? I wonder if this is why my T seems to be getting worse...
Are there any people who are very knowledgeable of it on here? For example, when at football matches, I wear ear plugs and often talk to my Dad next to me or if I go to a restaurant etc. Based on the background noise being about 90db, according to Wikipedia, the occlusion effect adds on as much as 20db. So, if speaking at 95db to be able to be heard by the other person, the ears are being exposed to as high as 115db. This seems crazy and surely defeats the point of plugs in some situations.
When at the football, when we score, I, as well as everybody else shouts/yells in excitement. With ear plugs in, I must expose my self to very loud noise! As I guess a yell could be 100db+ , so over 120db with ear plugs in - very worrying.
Link to Wikipedia page - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Occlusion_effect
Any thoughts? I wonder if this is why my T seems to be getting worse...