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Take a
look at the noise levels of many common
appliances and events around the house. You
might be surprised. All sounds are measured at
the distance that a person would typically be
from the source.
Contact an All Tech Insulation engineer today
(989-826-9999)
for a deeper discussion about your specific acoustic requirements.
Device dBA
Grand Canyon at Night (no roads, birds,
wind) 10
A soft whisper in
someone’s ear 15
Quiet basement w/o mechanical equipment/Rustling
leaves
20
A Quiet
Library 30
Quiet Room 28-33
Computer 37-45
Refrigerator 40-43
Typical Living Room 40
Forced Hot Air Heating System 42-52
Radio Playing in Background 45-50
Background Music 50
Typical Neighborhood 40-50
Bathroom Exhaust Fan 54-55
Microwave 55-59
Normal conversation
(3-5 feet), sewing machine,
typewriter
55-65
Clothes Dryer 56-58
Printer 58-65
Window Fan on High 60-66
Alarm Clock 60-80
Dishwasher 63-66
Clothes Washer 65-70
Phone 66-75
Inside Car, Windows
Closed, 30 MPH 68-73
Inside Car, Windows Open, 30 MPH 72-76
Handheld Electronic Games 68-76
Kitchen Exhaust Fan, High 69-71
Garbage Disposal 76-83
Air Popcorn Popper 78-85
Hairdryer 80-95
Electric Can Opener 81-83
Vacuum Cleaner 84-89
Coffee Grinder 84-95
Handheld Electric Mixer 86-91
Lawn Mower 88-94
Lawnmower,
power drill, shop tools, 8 hours
per day is the maximum exposure (protects 90% of people)
90*
Air Compressor 90-93
1/4" Drill 92-95
Food Processor 93-100
Weed Whacker 94-96
Outboard motor, farm tractor, garbage truck,
snowmobile; 2 hours per day is
the maximum exposure without protection 100*
Leaf Blower 95-105
Circular Saw 100-104
Maximum Output of Stereo 100-110
Jackhammer,
chainsaw, pneumatic drill, loud rock concert; 15 minutes per
day is the maximum exposure without protection 110*
Pain begins 125
Threshold of
pain. Noise level during a stock car race 130
Gun muzzle blast, jet engine; Even brief
exposure injures unprotected ears. Maximum allowed noise with
hearing protector 140*
Death of hearing tissue 180
Loudest sound possible to measure 194
The next time you operate a leaf blower, weed whacker, snowmobile, or any device
emitting more than 90 dB, please use proper ear protection.
If you are not sure how many
decibels a device is producing. Go to your local Radio Shack and
purchase a decibel meter (about 40 dollars). You might be
surprised how loud (unsafe) the world is becoming. We were.
Contact an All Tech Insulation engineer today
(989-826-9999)
for a deeper discussion about your specific acoustic requirements.
·
The above information was obtained through
OSHA.
*
Note:
exceeding the time limit at decibel level will produce hearing
loss.
Once hearing
loose or damage occurs it almost never returns.
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