Just as a refresher, what is the science that led the UltraQuiet team to conclude that bone conduction was a better delivery vehicle than normal headphones?
@Steve, I'll be happy to help with ideas, UI design, developing, brainstorming.. just let me know..
Thanks for trying the matching with your headphones, I'll wait for your response.
I think that it worked better than regular headphones for me.
your music plan sounds interesting..
where can I find the best info for Notched white noise? I'd like to make a music file that is with ordinary music transposed to the ultra high frequency spectrum and then if I understand correctly, I should remove the sound at the frequency where my T is?.. I can try that. Thanks.
@earflappin, Thanks for that info! I am trying it out right now.
for some reason I didn't have that band stop filter installed as a default, even though I downloaded and re-installed audacity.
if anyone else needs it, I found it here, you'll need to put it in you c:\program files\audacity\plug-ins folder and reopen the program.
Edit: I just tried it for 2 minutes and it made my T go crazy loud like never in recent times.. am I doing something wrong or I'll pass for now?
That's because the frequency doubles for each octave. Concert pitch tuning is to have middle A at 440Hz. The A above that is 880Hz, then 1760Hz, 3520Hz, 7040Hz, 14080Hz. So it takes a different amount of Hz out depending on the note / frequency that you remove an octave from.@earflappin, Thanks.. I did use the analyze/plot spectrum and is showed that all sound in the range between 11260Hz and 19100Hz has been removed. , my T is at 13760Hz and I can't hear anything above 15KHz even with my good ear so it's like I listen to white noise of 1Hz-11260Hz, everything above that I can't hear anyway. do you think that it could help me like that?
I tested the same procedure with a demo frequency of 7800Hz, then the range removed is between 6500Hz-10100Hz which leaves plenty of sound below and above that range.
I wonder why it removed about a range of 8KHz for a T of 13760Hz compared to a removal of about 4KHz in range for T of 7800Hz and both should be one octave.
Probably not. Instead of notch filtering you effectively just end up with a low pass filter.@Steve, Right.. I was too tired to even think about it.. so it's not the best treatment for high frequency T like mine?
That's because the frequency doubles for each octave. Concert pitch tuning is to have middle A at 440Hz. The A above that is 880Hz, then 1760Hz, 3520Hz, 7040Hz, 14080Hz. So it takes a different amount of Hz out depending on the note / frequency that you remove an octave from.
@@jazz You have etd.. have you done your audiogram.. any hearing loss ?
My ent and audiologist suspected I have conductive loss probably just dried up mucus or just inflammation. .I have hearing loss in higher frequency above 8k.. I jst want to know for comparing. .
I get RI around and above 8k..
Not yet, been a busy week. Should get some time with them tomorrow.@SteveH, any further news to report based on your DIY bone conduction experimentation? Thanks.
@jazz I also suspect I have damage in cochlea. . Cause I saw note on testing testing for etd.. "low amplitude reflexes in both ears" after googling around found that possible lesions on cochlea.. so far my earing loss is in higher frequency. . Above 8k .. Initially had loss from 4k which came back.. I am also hoping high frequency hearing loss would return slowly. . (Doing hbot now hopefully it will help with healing )
For now mostly I don't notice the t unless its very quite. . Or I block my ears ... if i had a spike sweeping sine wave from android app knocks it out easily with few sweeps..
You're still early into tinnitus. There's an excellent chance that you'll make a full recovery. But you will probably always have some damage to your cochlea, which means you'll need to wear hearing protection whenever you go to loud places, do yard work, etc. Many people have very minor tinnitus for years; but then they forget about it and expose themselves to loud noises and the tinnitus comes back, only much louder.
HBOT is good to try. I'd also take NAC. See this thread:
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/n-acetylcysteine.395/
Hey @Steve: I am just passing on this post from @SoulStation in case you missed it (the shout out was not correctly entered).Hey @SteveH just an FWI---I'm also an t / h sufferer who is a musician/audio-engineer. I'm willing to help in anyway possible. I am fluent in/have a nice protools rig/synths etc and would be willing to do editing work for this or whatever if need be. I'm just throwing it out there.
I didn't get to do any. But there's no time like the present so whilst I'm doing other work I'm going to try a few combinations of sound running in the background.Hey, this Ultra Quiet thread is pretty quiet.... @Steve, did you get a chance to do any further experimentation this past weekend by chance? Many thanks.
Don't worry, I often need a kick to remind me of things.@Steve - any update to share? Hate to hound you but I am trying to decide if I want to invest time/energy into this treatment. Thanks.