Why would hearing muffs be tested against continuous and not impulse noise?
Looking at a new pair of earmuffs that a NRR (Noise Reduction Rating) or 34 DB. However the fine print says that said rating is for continous noise and not impulse (like gunfire).
Why would they be tested that way as a big reason people buy earmuffs is to protect their hearing while shooting?
2 answers
Current testing is "is based upon idealized laboratory testing, the NRR can overestimate the protection"
There is some talk about changing the rating system, but in a quick search I don't find anything recent.
Some sources recommend wearing dual protection 'earmuffs and plugs' because the rating on the product, is NOT tested for impulse noises like gun shots.
References
- New Proposed EPA Noise Reduction Rating
- High-level impulse sounds. How well will your hearing protector perform?
Assuming the ear protector is a linear system, it will attenuate the various frequencies in a pulse the same as it would a steady tone at each frequency.
An impulse is by definition short-lived, and contains a wide spectrum of frequencies. Since the attenuation as a function of frequency varies, there is no easy single number for the attenuation of an impulse. This depends on the frequency content of the impulse.
Even for continuous tones, a single attenuation number is a dumbed-down rating. I haven't looked at standards for hearing protection specs, but that single spec probably implies a particular frequency mix, and the attenuation at different frequencies may be weighed differently. Very likely, different standards agencies have different specs for this too.
It is a lot easier, and results in more reliable numbers, for manufacturers to test sound attenuation devices one frequency at a time. This is probably done with a slow frequency sweep. Surely they have a nice graph internally that shows attenuation as a function of frequency. Simpler specs are then derived from that.
If you had the graph and knew the frequency content of your "impulse", then you could compute some overall attenuation metric for that impulse. However, the next impulse could have a different frequency mix, and therefore a different overall attenuation. Without some definition of a standard impulse (a real mathematical impulse lasts 0 time and contains all frequencies equally), any impulse spec would be meaningless, and not particularly applicable to other impulses anyway.
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