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Author
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Topic: Wiring headphones into my monitor
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Frank Angel
Film God
Posts: 5305
From: Brooklyn NY USA
Registered: Dec 1999
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posted 02-17-2007 02:01 AM
Dan is absolutely right. Especially those "buds" as they call them nowadays, that are inserted into the ear canal. If these do not have serious limiting circuitry built into the amplifier driving them, they can easily cause permanent ear damage -- damage that is slow, irreversible and completely preventable. When you notice it, it will be to late to fix that problem you've developed for not being able to hear high and midrange frequencies, most notably in the speech range. You really don't want to spend your 40's and beyond saying, "What did you say?" Because once that damage is done, you won't be able to hear consonants, which are essential to understanding speech. Without the ability to hear those mid and high end frequencies, speech is nothing but unintelligible noise. It's loud enough -- you just won't be able to understand what anyone is saying. It's not fun.
At least with free-air earphones, the sound waves are able to disperse more readily into the surrounding area; ear buds (just look at those things -- even a layman can see the physics of them) are designed to direct the sound waves entirely and directly at the eardrum with no avenue for that energy to escape or any chance of back pressure thru the mouth and nose and eustatian tubes to equalize the pressure on the other side of the ear.
Digital sound especially has such a wide dynamic range, you could be listening to sound that seems comfortable and moderate in level one minute, then here comes that car chase (think any action film....think the train wreck in THE FUGITIVE with its sounds of screeching, twisting metal) or a sudden bombastic stretch of soundtrack score. You better pray those delicate, microscopic sila nerve hairs in your ears and the ear drum itself are not dead at the end the movie.
Seriously; I am a sound engineer....I know plenty of guys, musicians and engineers, who now have to wear hearing aids, and all but one or two are much younger than me.
Actually, any of the wireless systems, be it infrared as in the ADA units, or that blu-ray job or the consumer wireless headset systems, these are a better bet because their dynamic range is very limited in order to make them work halfway decently without over driving their transmitters, they all use a hefty amount of compression. That's good to prevent sudden bursts of very loud sound pumped directly into your ear canal; it's bad if you play compressed sound at very loud levels because it keeps the sound pressure constant, which, if it is played at a high enough level, can be worse for your ears because your ears can't rest as they are no dynamics -- the sound is always at one level -- too loud. It's akin to the difference between an RMS rating which a measured, constant energy, and normal audio that has gaps in the waveform or or what they used to call the "HiFi" rating, i.e., a system playing real music with its broken waveform giving the equipment time to recover before it is pushed into distortion or clipping.
The absolutely WORSE thing would be to hook up a direct ear canal bud headset directly to the output of an amplifier and then stick it in your ear. Listen; I know from whence I speak....I said LISTEN; I KNOW FROM WHENCE I SPEAK [ 02-18-2007, 06:36 AM: Message edited by: Frank Angel ]
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