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<blockquote data-quote="SlugButter" data-source="post: 8863511" data-attributes="member: 678073"><p>Ringing ears is a tell tale sign of hearing damage. My ears ring if I run big equipment like a tractor or processor all day for example. That’s causing damage for sure. My ears don’t normally ring after playing my system. It’s usually the midrange and highs that cause most of the damage. Higher frequencies carry more energy. A 150 DB subwoofer isnt nearly as damaging as a 150 DB tweeter would be. I’m hitting around 143 DB from the sub while playing music full tilt depending on the song and my ears don’t ring after 20-30 minutes. I think a lot of people are drowning out the highs and mids with bass and harming their ears with high DB music up front. With the system I have now, I was worried about hurting my ears, so I played without the sub and played very loud with my fronts for a day to gauge what volume the front speakers would be too loud at.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SlugButter, post: 8863511, member: 678073"] Ringing ears is a tell tale sign of hearing damage. My ears ring if I run big equipment like a tractor or processor all day for example. That’s causing damage for sure. My ears don’t normally ring after playing my system. It’s usually the midrange and highs that cause most of the damage. Higher frequencies carry more energy. A 150 DB subwoofer isnt nearly as damaging as a 150 DB tweeter would be. I’m hitting around 143 DB from the sub while playing music full tilt depending on the song and my ears don’t ring after 20-30 minutes. I think a lot of people are drowning out the highs and mids with bass and harming their ears with high DB music up front. With the system I have now, I was worried about hurting my ears, so I played without the sub and played very loud with my fronts for a day to gauge what volume the front speakers would be too loud at. [/QUOTE]
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