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#26 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 27, 2008
Location: Stafford VA
Posts: 969
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one single shot without HPD's will cause hearing loss.
The sharp loud noise causes microscopic hairs in the inner ear to shear away these microscopic hairs are nerve endings and that is what causes hearing loss. |
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#27 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 27, 2006
Location: Lane County Oregon
Posts: 2,547
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Panino - There are a lot of variables in your question, but usually hearing is lost through frequent exposure.
I am willing to expose my hearing to unmuffled guns during hunting season, where it is just a shot or 2. Range time I use plugs and muffs. Now that I am going to use a SW .460 to hunt with, I am going to get some electronic plugs that will allow me to hunt, but shut down the BOOM. |
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#28 |
Member
Join Date: February 20, 2008
Posts: 68
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hearing protection in military
Anyone know what military does for hearing protection for foot soldiers while there in active duty?
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#29 |
Senior Member
Join Date: December 17, 2005
Location: Swamp dweller
Posts: 6,213
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Protecting the ears
NOTHING. I am currently working with a vet fron Afgan and Irac and according to him NO protection provided at all
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NRA Life Member, NRA Chief Range Safety Officer, NRA Certified Pistol Instructor,, USPSA & Steel Challange NROI Range Officer, ICORE Range Officer, ,MAG 40 Graduate As you are, I once was, As I am, You will be. |
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#30 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 27, 2008
Location: Stafford VA
Posts: 969
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the army issues Ear plugs. But when you are trying to communicate in combat it gets a little hard to hear over gun fire and ear plugs. That and if your hearing is muffled you cannot hear the bad guys either.
The only reason they issue ear plugs is to remove them from paying disability for hearing loss. Because they gave you the tools to protect your hearing. At least that is what i was told when I went in for my exit physical. I had notable hearing loss before joining and it was even worse after i got done. Operating heavy equipment without hearing protection is not good for hearing. |
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#31 |
Junior Member
Join Date: March 8, 2008
Posts: 14
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When i was old enough to buy a handgun. I ran out and bought a HI-POINT .45 acp. took to the range and comenced firing. 100 rounds later with no hearing protection. Needless to say I found out HI-POINTS are crappy and ill never shoot without protection again/ ive had a ringing in my left ear ever since. that was about 5 years ago.
I prefer the plugs... |
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#32 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 12, 2007
Location: N.J. and trying to decide what state to move to.
Posts: 974
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i wear the foam ear plugs when shooting long guns. handguns i may use earmuffs. if i forgot the muffs i'll use the plugs. i keep a pair in my hunting coat at all times. i don't shove them in my ears right before shooting in the woods on the hunt. i have fired a few slugs and rounds of buckshot without the plugs and the first shot wasn't too loud to me but the other shots made my ears ring. i didn't do that anymore. i have hearing loss from too many times of having headphones on listening to rock music(aerosmith,ac/dc.) and shooting the .22 without muffs or plugs. i don't know if the fireworks tossed around the backyard did any damage. i am 34 and there are times when i probably couldn't hear a dump truck driving through a nitroglycerine plant.
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BEAR Bows,Remington shotguns,Marlin rifles |
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#33 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 22, 2007
Location: In the oak studded hills near Napa
Posts: 2,203
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Pardon???
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#34 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 27, 2006
Location: Lane County Oregon
Posts: 2,547
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Quote:
Now if the guys in combat wear them or not, that is a different question. I never ran a range, even in Somalia, that we did not require ear plugs and have plenty on hand for those who didn't have them handy. But again, outside the wire is a whole different world... |
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#35 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: September 22, 2005
Location: Behind a keyboard.
Posts: 1,565
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Quote:
For that reason, I always double-plug at the range: headset over plugs. I no longer trust one method to fully do the job. |
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#36 |
Senior Member
Join Date: April 27, 2008
Location: Greenville, SC
Posts: 144
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everytime you are near a gunshot that is unsupressed it causes hearing damage (without protection). maybe it has something to do with that high pitched bell like noise aka the ringing in your ears. shooting a 12 guage indoors will cause hearing damage. not enough to notice probably, unless you just do something totally crazy with it. definitely worth protecting whatever is inside your house though, the hearing damage is a very small price to pay. and likely if you do shoot somebody it will be the last thing on your mind after you pull the trigger.
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#37 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 19, 2008
Location: Maine
Posts: 425
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Haveing tinnitus and a fair amount of hearing loss I can attest to the benefit of hearing protection. I just wish I had used it religiously years ago.
Once it is gone (hearing) it's gone................ |
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#38 |
Junior Member
Join Date: April 9, 2008
Posts: 13
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Your forgot to include my motorcycle.
![]() I have been using hearing protection for years now. |
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#39 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 20, 2006
Location: Ohio
Posts: 2,300
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even with hearing protection you run the risk of hearing damage, and once it is gone, you aint' getting it back.
I have tinnitus from my years in the military and I wore double hearing protection (plugs and muffs) on the range, but when I went to war (iraq, afghanistan, etc....) there was no time to call time out so you could put your muffs or plugs on. Your hearing is a precious thing and do what you can to protect and keep it. I used to have excellent hearing and now I am lucky to hear somebody who is speaking directly to me from across the table. ![]() Plus hearing really is a necessity if you go hunting etc... I have had to learn how to adapt my style (used to be stalking, and still hunting) to more of a long range game where I do a lot of glassing and long shots. And competition can suffer as well if you can barely hear the range officer, or those around you. Just wear the hearing protection (double is best). JOE
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Lifetime member VFW and NRA "Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati" (when all else fails play dead) -Red Green |
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#40 |
Junior Member
Join Date: October 7, 2008
Location: Oregon
Posts: 9
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I wish the military had said something back in '65 thru '68. Way to much gunfire with no hearing protection. A lot of hearing loss and a great built in whistle.
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#41 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: August 19, 2007
Location: Iowa
Posts: 624
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Quote:
I was in afghan too a few years ago. I wore ear pro on the range, but when RPG's come screaming out of the mountains, you can't call time out to put your ear plugs in. I bought a pair of Surefire plugs that still allow you to hear, but keep out gunshot noise, and can be converted to standard plugs by using an attached stopper. I will take many pairs on my next middle eastern adventure. |
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#42 |
Staff In Memoriam
Join Date: October 31, 2007
Location: Western Florida panhandle
Posts: 11,069
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Just turned 40 and have had a VERY constant noticable ringing in my ears for MUCH more than 10 years. Sadly I see it as too late to worry about MY hearing. As a father I have also failed a bit by not insisting my kids wear protection (they better not make me a premature grand parent however) since I can't seem to get past the do as I say not as I do thing. I have told them the risks of hearing loss and of the incessant distraction and battle to fall asleep with the ringing.
I have done many things to destroy my hearing above and beyond gunfire. Building and riding souped up open pipe harleys. Riding 2 stroke dirt bikes. Wrenching on top fuel grade engines with zoomie pipes blasting in my un-protected ears. One thing I noticed is that the pitch plays as much or more a role as decible of volume. Some of them motors would reach in deep and tickle my ears all the way to my throat while others thumped... The "ticklers" seemed far harder on me. Metal shop work also played a big part too. But I also know that hundreds of thousands of various rounds of gunfire have had their costs too. Brent |
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#43 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 28, 2006
Location: South Central Michigan...near
Posts: 6,501
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Interpreter needed.
The only time that I did not need my wife to "interpret" in a movie theater because I could not hear all the dialog was when I used the headset offered for the hearing impaired.
The only way I can understand all the dialog on T.V. is to have it very loud, have my wife interpret, or wear a headset. The Dr.s have told me that I have lost at least 50% of the 5,000 cycles per second range in both ears. Despite hear loss from gunfire being a myth, I now wear soft earplugs, with shooting muffs over the top of them for all my shooting. I am 65 years old but my hearing was already gone by 25 years old. |
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#44 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 14, 2008
Posts: 101
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ouch...
thanks for the info.. shot my pt140 1 time with out plugs..
never again... 3 hours later.. my head still hurts.. i still have rings in my ears.. WHAT!!!! WHAT!!!! |
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#45 |
Staff
Join Date: February 12, 2001
Location: DFW Area
Posts: 25,569
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Any time your ears ring after a loud noise it's indicative of damage to your ears. Generally speaking that damage is permanent. Your brain will compensate to the extent that it is able which usually means that you won't notice the hearing loss without a test until it has progressed to the point that it is severe.
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#46 |
Member
Join Date: February 16, 2006
Posts: 65
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This should be posted in every range in America
May I suggest this information be somehow posted to all the other forums on this excellent site? This understanding is as vital to the "safe handling" of firearms as any of the other rules we are taught and live by.
This explains a lot, including some hearing loss I sustained learning to shoot outdoors with a 357S&W a very long time ago with just a little tissue tucked into my ears. |
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#47 |
Senior Member
Join Date: January 29, 2006
Location: Florida
Posts: 796
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What is the effect or reduction in DB's from the use of the electronic muffs?...................................ck
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#48 |
Senior Member
Join Date: June 28, 2004
Posts: 1,784
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Good thread.
I work in Acoustics and have done so for about eight (8) years now. There is an SAE (Society of Automotive Engineers) Technical Paper I will send to any who PM me their e-mail that deals with Firearm exposure and Hearing Loss. Very interesting document. The crux: IMPULSIVE noises are far more damaging to ears than constant tone, non-impulsive noise sources. The human ear filters the sound (we call it A-weighting) in which the freuencies at 5kHz are accentuated. Exposure to gunfire will reduce the ear's sensitivity here. PM me.
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"Necessity is the plea of every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants, it is the creed of slaves." ~ William Pitt, 1783 |
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#49 |
Senior Member
Join Date: December 31, 1999
Location: Middle Georgia, USA
Posts: 13,198
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We are moving this thread to General Discussion and pinning it at the top.
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#50 |
Senior Member
Join Date: December 17, 2002
Posts: 287
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Chui, I tried to PM you but was not succesfull.
Could you please send a copy of the SAE paper to my Email address NukemJim (at) Yahoo.com Thank you NukemJim |
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