Sunday, July 16, 2006

Useful Table - Those Decibels Again

Common Noise Levels and Typical Reactions


Below is a useful comparative table of noise levels. But what does Apparent Loudness mean?

Alright, it is a bit complicated!

Let us start at a noise level of 70 db. We experience this sound because a certain level of noise energy is reaching our ears. Now suppose we double the energy reaching our ears. A noise meter will tell us that the noise level is now 73 db (a rise of 3 db in noise measured on the meter is always due to a doubling of the noise energy level in the air around us, e.g. 43 db has twice the noise energy of 40 db, 63 db has double the noise energy of 6o db and so on) . But the sense of sound in our brain does not react to the noise energy level in the same ratio. A rise from 70 db to 73 db does not feel to us like a doubling of the noise, it sounds like much less. For us to think that the noise has doubled, the noise energy level outside has to increase TEN times (which a noise meter will register as an increase of 10 db)!
So if we start at 40 db and increase the noise to 50 db, the real noise energy outside has increased 10 times, but our ears tell us that it has only increased 2 times i.e. the apparent loudness has doubled.
If we increase further to 60 db, the real noise is now 100 times greater but our ears tell us that it has increased 2 times from 40 to 50 db, and another two times from 50 to 60 db or 2 x 2, or 4 times altogether. Increase the noise once more from 60 to 70 db (the noise outside has now gone up 1000 times more than at 40 db); our ears tell us it has gone up 2 x 2 x 2 or 8 times compared to 40 db.
Finally increase the noise outside another 10 times. A meter will record an increase from 70 to 80 db; the actual noise energy has now increased 10,000 times but our ears tell us it has gone up 2 x 2 x 2 x 2 or 16 times greater than it was at 40 db.
So there you are!


Let me summarise:

40 db Reference level

-----------Real Noise Level ----------APPARENT LOUDNESS

50 db -----increased by 10-------------- increased by 2
60 db -----increased by 100------------ increased by 4
70 db -----increased by 1000 -----------increased by 8
80 db -----increased by 10000 ---------increased by 16
************(compared to the levels at 40 db)**********


Activity

Noise Level [dB(A)]

Apparent Loudness

Typical Physical Response


Rocket launching 180
Danger level

Threshold of pain
Gunshot
Jet engine taking off

140
Danger level

Military jet
Air raid siren
Shotgun
Hydraulic press (3 m away)

130

512 times as loud

Limited ability to hear amplified speech.
Noise may cause pain.

Can damage hearing after 3.75 minutes exposure per day

Car horn
Propeller aircraft
Air-raid siren
120 256 times as loud Can damage hearing after 7.5 minutes exposure per day

Sand-blasting
Squealing pigs
Inboard motorboat
Typical night club
Unsilenced motorcycle (7m away)

110

Over 128 times as loud!!

Maximum vocal effort.

Can damage hearing after 30 minutes exposure per day

Amplified Rock Music 110-130 Over 128 to 512 times as loud!! Can damage hearing after
3.75 - 30 minutes
exposure per day
Helicopter
Motorised/power mower
105
Can damage hearing after 1 hour
exposure per day

Jet takeoff @ 500m
Train horn @ 30m
Diesel truck
Pneumatic drill/jackhammer

100

64 times as loud

Can damage hearing after 2 hours exposure per day

Heavy truck @ 15m
Busy city street
passing motorcycle
Lawn mower
Loud shout
Sreaming child

90

32 times as loud

Very annoying.

Can damage hearing after
8 hours exposure per day

Average factory
Electric shaver
85

Busy traffic intersection
Motorway construction site
Outboard motor
Alarm clock (with bell)
Freight train (15m away)

80

16 times as loud

Annoying .

Motorway traffic @ 15m
Roadside traffic
Train horn @ 500m
Vacuum cleaner
Mixer
electric sewing machine
Noisy restaurant
Conversation in a loud voice

70

8 times as loud

Telephone use difficult.

Washing machine/dishwasher 65

Light car traffic @ 15m
City or commercial areas
Noisy office
Normal conversation
Clothes dryer
Background music

60

4 times as loud

Intrusive.

Quiet office

50

2 times as loud

Speech interference.

Refrigerator 45

Quiet residential area
Kitchen/bathroom
Public library

40

Arbitrary Base
Reference Level

Quiet .

Leaves rustling
Very soft music
Recording studio
Living/dining/bedroom

30

1/2 as loud

Very quiet.

Threshold of sound perception

10

1/8 as loud

Just audible.

Threshold of hearing

0

N/A

Not audible.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Interesting site - you appear to measure the noise level in the places you visit - how about an article on noise meters and where to buy them ? Assessments of noise being too loud are easy to dismiss - decibels are more impactful because the info can be linked to scientific research on the ipmpact of sound on people's health, etc.

4:26:00 pm  

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