- Joined
- May 31, 2023
- Messages
- 480
I think we should get back on task here in this thread. I am guilty of getting the thread a bit off track too. @Ryan Avery do we have that video yet? I know all of us are anxious to see it!
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If "intensity" is additive, and I in no way claim it is when it comes to hearing loss, these would be equal
5 shots at 133dB
10 shots at 130dB
100 shots of 120dB
People who wore masks while driving alone in their car during COVID would agree.And if you care about hearing damage- you shouldn’t be doing that with any of them.
People who wore masks while driving alone in their car during COVID would agree.
My main can is an ab raptor 8 with 5” reflex.I’m ignorant. How do I functionally use what you just wrote?
And why won’t you state which can you use?
My main can is an ab raptor 8 with 5” reflex.
But I have many. 2 a-10. Banish 30 gold. Banish 22. A j sipp made 416 OTB. I have an airlock 6.5 and nano I haven’t shot yet.
Because it’s functionally useless. 1db has more danger than 2dB of sound. So what? How is that useful?
If he or you wants to say that “yes, in absolute terms 2 db difference does in fact increase total risk; but once you are below a certain threshold- there’s not much you can do about it functionally”- great. That is actually what I have stated all day.
I’ll ask the same question to you- what can do you use, with what cartridge, and what barrel length do you find acceptable?
So which is worse, one shot at 133db or 10 shots at 130 db, or 100 at 120?
I’m not advocating for any of those. I’m advocating for one shot at 127 versus one shot at 133.
If I am shooting 10 shots at 130, I am wearing double hearing protection or I am in a life or death struggle. Because otherwise I need to shoot those 10 shots over something like 2.5-5 hours to mitigate the risk of hearing damage.
It’s useful to the extent that less noise requires less recovery time between exposures. That recovery time difference may make zero functional difference for a hunter who takes one shot in a day. But for someone exposed to repeated shots, even while wearing other hearing protection, it represents additional protection. You really can’t argue that more protection is “bad.” Whether it is worth the costs in length, weight, diameter, etc. is another matter.
And since there is no such thing as “140 decibels is hearing safe” - the whole 140 decibel thing is a workplace rule about requiring hearing protection for workers exposed to a single exposure above that level - there is real value in having more hearing protection. It’s not like you magically don’t suffer hearing loss if you get the noise down to 118 (e.g. suppressed subsonic). You still have to limit your exposure and/or use other protection.
Last year you were lecturing me for taking a single shot without hearing protection using the OG (which, if I recall correctly, metered at 133). Said I was dangerously irresponsible and reckless, or words to that effect.
This year you are apparently dying on a hill that there’s no medical difference between 133 and 127 (you haven’t said that explicitly, but that’s what you are saying when you argue there’s no point getting it below the 130s). You are stubbornly wrong about that.
No one here is advocating for maximum suppression without regard to weight, length, etc.
You love to trot out the straw man that if someone doesn’t want to use an OG because it isn’t quiet enough for him, then he should be using some huge suppressor. As if those were the only two choices in the world. They aren’t.
As for what I use, today I used an AB Raptor 10 with 5” reflex on a 16.5” Tikka .223, an AB Raptor 8 with 3” reflex on a 20” Tikka .243, and an OG 6.5 on a 24” Mauser .25-06.
And I also used headphones and ear plugs for every shot I fired today because I was on the range. I’ve hunted with the .25-06 and OG 6.5 combination enough to know that I really like it and it works well for me in the field. As did a 20” 6.5 CM with the AB Raptor 8 and a 22” 6.5 CM with the Airlock 6.5. And I’ve used those suppressors enough to know they work better - on any of my 6.5’s or below - than an option that meters at 133. And I’d rather use my AB Raptor 8 with 3” reflex on anything .308 or below than the OG.
The reality is that the common meters, while better than nothing- do not have the sample rate to give consistent real numbers. Some cans meter significantly lower than they actually are, and some meter louder than they are. Systems that are precise enough to give real numbers with all can designs are very expensive- far above what almost all companies can afford.
Cool- so what do you do when it goes from 30° F, to 40 or 50° F? Do you just not shoot them anymore?
Are you actually lecturing me on hearing protection with guns?
Ok. Tell me how to functionally use what you just wrote.
And that reality doesn’t give you enough pause to maybe think about what I have written, and maybe that you have missed something?
I didn’t say any of that- drop the lawyer nonsense and exaggeration, and read what I actually wrote.
Then how is 2dB some big deal once it is below a certain threshold- especially when the meters can’t determine that level of detail? That literally is what I wrote.
What are you talking about? You cannot be this dense.
Cool. Since 2dB is such a big deal- you know, the reality of variability in testing suppressors- what this entire back and forth has been about today; you don’t shoot any of those cans when it warms up 30°?
Neat. Not one of those things have I argued, nor addressed.
I want the quietest can I can get- that fits the size, length, and weight I will accept. And once below a certain threshold, there is no functional real risk increase that can be mitigated in reality. Again read what I have written here in context to what was being discussed- testing and metering suppressors with non professional level meters.
Formi,
When you get a moment to come up for air...
There seems to be some issues with your equipment, setup, or understanding.
Question #1: How are you getting some cans to meter louder than actual, with insufficient sample rate?
Question #2: Are you saying that cans get louder, as ambient increases?
Recall our previous posts where you were using A-weighting, when you should have used Z-weighting.
Likewise, you were using arithmetic average, when you should have used log average.
I think you've got similar issues going on here.
Once the ad hominems come out, the conversation is generally over.
And no, I won’t stop shooting if the ambient temperature goes up enough to make 127 into 128 or 129. Because, as you pointed out so many times, 1 or 2 decibels isn’t really worth arguing about.
The reality is that the common meters, while better than nothing- do not have the sample rate to give consistent real numbers. Some cans meter significantly lower than they actually are, and some meter louder than they are. Systems that are precise enough to give real numbers with all can designs are very expensive- far above what almost all companies can afford. And for the most part, it actually doesn’t matter the small differences between good cans… as long as you aren’t totally ignorant (or deceitful) and claim impossible numbers.
Ok, so the meters available aren’t perfect- well, the way to deal with those limitations is to recognize when the numbers being given are too good to be true, and not state them. Do larger sample sizes, 10+ shots, compare with known cans sized by side, and test multiple days. Even still- it’s very easy to be 3-6 dB off actual. The problem is people and companies latch onto artificially low numbers (like a can metering less than dry fire, or metering less than the action cycling- let alone port pop, etc.).
Again, once numbers are comfortably in the 130’s- it really doesn’t matter, and people don’t notice the difference in real life. It’s only the internet dorks that argue about 1-2 dB’s, and especially from systems that can’t measure it consistently.
And, to get back on topic, it would be really nice to see someone test suppressors with proper equipment, proper sample sizes, and consistent setups. I’m done paying attention to videos of dudes in a field holding a meter and firing off five rounds.
Lacking the raw samples from which each was derived -- you can'tHow do I compare one can that only has A-weighting listed, with another can that uses Z-weighting?
You can't -- unless you have the raw samples from which each was derived.
This is my experience as well. On the gun with ear pro they all sound pretty similar. Off to the side, there can be big differences. When shooting a 45-70 I had sonic and subs of basically the same load. Some just over the speed of sound, some under. There was a noticeable difference when off to the side when a sonic round went downrange.But, as a shooter wearing ear protection are you guys really noticing much difference between cans? I shot 8 different cans off the same .223 this last week from 7” long can to 4” can and unless I intentionally pulled ear pro out slightly I wasn’t noticing a giant difference. The two short cans were a lot snappier and less pleasing to the ear w loose ear pro.
As a bystander I can certainly notice the differences.
Definitely. As long as both use the same meters with the same settings, it's down to environmental differences, sample size, and a laundry list of other, decreasingly less significant, factors.Would you then say, that given that- you need to, at a minimum; use the same standard that everyone else is using, until a better standard is common?