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On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 09:32:23 +0200, Thomas Borchert
wrote: RK, The question is, does ANR do any better at attenuating the ear-damaging frequencies than ordinary noise attenuating headsets? I suggest you read the ANR tutorial at Lightspeed's website. I did read that article, as suggested by Marc J. Zeitlin in a previous message in this thread, thank you both. While an interesting article, it doesn't really tell me too much that I didn't already know, or suspect, and it doesn't constitute the scientific evidence that I'm looking for. I did a search in Google Scholar for papers on the subject and hit a paper that appeared in "Journal of Occupational Health" reporting a study on an ANR (or ANC) for industrial workers. That article presented evidence that workers showed less TTS (Temporary Threshold Shift), as measured with an audiometer, when using ANC hearing protection. TTS is apparently that "dullness" in your ears that you feel after a bare-eared flight. While the study doesn't cover aviation headsets, it does suggest that ANR might be more effective at preventing hearing loss than conventional noise-attenuating headsets, which in turn are better than nothing at all. The article reports p0.045 using the Wilcoxon sign rank test. Now that's the kind of statistical evidence that I can get my teeth into. Give me some reason to accept or reject h0. Does anyone know of scientific papers or journal articles on Aviation ANRs? Preferably a paper that I can download as a PDF for free instead of having to pay a fortune to buy a copy from one of those scientific paper publishers. Of course I've always been concerned about hearing loss as I already have a hearing loss in one ear (mumps when I was 5) that kept me from pursuing a commercial license (though recent rule changes could change that). Consequently, I've always been interested in keeping what I already have and was rather excited when I first heard that Bose was introducing an ANR headset--until I found out that I couldn't afford it. I do fly a somewhat quieter airplane, a Cherokee, so it's not as bad as with some airplanes. I once used a sound level meter and found that the noise in the Cherokee was only a few db higher than my car (a Vega at the time) though with the logarithmic db scale, only a few points still means an awful lot of noise. I may be ready for a new headset since I've been noticing that my current headset, a cheap DC knock off, has lately been exhibiting audio dropouts. I suspect a broken wire in the plug. Now if I could only come up with the cash. After the disastrous annual inspection this year and the recent slide in the stock market, I'm not prepared for a headset. Maybe if I bought a lottery ticket every day... ![]() RK Henry |
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