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  3. Are headphones safe?

Are headphones safe?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • J JamesA_Dev

    Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

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    P Offline
    peterchen
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    Low levels are ok. The problem with headphone is that they tempt you to listen louder, especially if you try to drown out surrounding noise. So yes, upgrade your headphones, but keep control of the volume. I find that even at soft levels, without covering surrounding noise it gives me something to focus on. Ignoring speech is much harder than other noise, though, especially if you hear just one side of the conversation. BTW. I learnt from a respectable source that if you had to much exposure the night before (loud concert), the best thing is to 1. take an aspirin and 2. listen to music at soft levels. The latter is apparently better than complete silence.

    FILETIME to time_t
    | FoldWithUs! | sighist | WhoIncludes - Analyzing C++ include file hierarchy

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    • P peterchen

      Low levels are ok. The problem with headphone is that they tempt you to listen louder, especially if you try to drown out surrounding noise. So yes, upgrade your headphones, but keep control of the volume. I find that even at soft levels, without covering surrounding noise it gives me something to focus on. Ignoring speech is much harder than other noise, though, especially if you hear just one side of the conversation. BTW. I learnt from a respectable source that if you had to much exposure the night before (loud concert), the best thing is to 1. take an aspirin and 2. listen to music at soft levels. The latter is apparently better than complete silence.

      FILETIME to time_t
      | FoldWithUs! | sighist | WhoIncludes - Analyzing C++ include file hierarchy

      J Offline
      J Offline
      JamesA_Dev
      wrote on last edited by
      #4

      That's the problem with having rubbish earphones at the moment: you start at a low level but the volume creeps up as the people get noisier.

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      • J JamesA_Dev

        Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

        N Offline
        N Offline
        NormDroid
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        JamesA_Dev wrote:

        I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused.

        Become a gardener, there a go, concerns gone :)

        Software Kinetics - The home of good software

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        • J JamesA_Dev

          Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

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          H Offline
          hairy_hats
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          Pardon? (I know, I just find it hard to resist a feed-line.)

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          • J JamesA_Dev

            Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

            J Offline
            J Offline
            JamesA_Dev
            wrote on last edited by
            #7

            I do own some ear muffs for DIY. Maybe I should try those. The problem with these is I find the muffled sound odd. I don't actually want to listen to music; it's just far less distracting. I also forget to mention that it's not an agile setup where people are talking about things you might actually be interested in. Some nice pink fluffy ear muffs might get the message across, but might get me taken away by men in white coats ;)

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            • J JamesA_Dev

              Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

              J Offline
              J Offline
              JustWorking
              wrote on last edited by
              #8

              You need to be alert of the phone when ringing or else it will not be safe for you not to answer when your boss call you and you don't answer coz you are putting you headphones.

              J 1 Reply Last reply
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              • J JamesA_Dev

                Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

                P Offline
                P Offline
                PIEBALDconsult
                wrote on last edited by
                #9

                Head phones at a very low level. I still hear everything, but I can tune it out.

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                • J JamesA_Dev

                  Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

                  D Offline
                  D Offline
                  David Crow
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #10

                  JamesA_Dev wrote:

                  Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing?

                  I'm thinking that if you have headphones on, you should make sure you are not flying a helicopter, and that a man named Blofeld is not below you in a wheelchair operating a remote control.

                  "One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson

                  "Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons

                  "Some people are making such thorough preparation for rainy days that they aren't enjoying today's sunshine." - William Feather

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                  • J JamesA_Dev

                    Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

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                    L Offline
                    Luc Pattyn
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    A helmet is safer. :)

                    Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles] Nil Volentibus Arduum

                    Please use <PRE> tags for code snippets, they preserve indentation, improve readability, and make me actually look at the code.

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                    • J JustWorking

                      You need to be alert of the phone when ringing or else it will not be safe for you not to answer when your boss call you and you don't answer coz you are putting you headphones.

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      JamesA_Dev
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #12

                      If you've decent phone software, you can get an alert to flash on your screen when a call is coming. We haven't got this though...

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                      • J JamesA_Dev

                        Our office is open plan and noisy. The developers find themselves listening to headphones a lot of the day. I'm concerned about the long-term damage to hearing that could be caused. I'm thinking of either upgrading to some better noise cancelling headphones, or just live with the noise and limit my listening to a certain amount of time a day. Does anyone have any knowledge on this sort of thing? From my little knowledge the damage is a combination of the sound level and the time. If really good headphones were purchased that allowed the music to be listened at low volumne would this take the risk away? (In the medium/long term I think the office layout is to be changed).

                        J Offline
                        J Offline
                        JamesA_Dev
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #13

                        I thought I'd mention that in the end I went for Sennheiser HD 202 at £26.48 These isolate quite well allowing lower volume listening. Not a scientific measure, but 20% Master Volume as opposed to about 50%. As well as being more comfortable than in-ear phones, it's a lot easier for people to notice that you're wearing them. So you can make a slight improvement without spending a lot.

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