Hearing Test
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5 Grand
Members Posts: 12,869 ✭✭✭✭✭
Comments
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Too easy...
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Come again?
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I stopped hearing between 14,000-15,000HZ
At what frequency did you stop hearing? or could you hear all the way up to 20,000HZ -
You're breaking up. Try typing slower.
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10515
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18232 actually
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babelipsss wrote: »Come again?
Steady B like THIS!
I'm serious, as serious as it gets especially when the mic's involved I won't sweat...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07o6cRfV4Lk -
babelipsss wrote: »You're breaking up. Try typing slower.
lol. the IC never fails. -
20-30Hz range is more so “felt” than heard, but still audible. I could hear a faint hiss soon as 16khz > came
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Somewhere in the 17 thousand range.
I'm only 25, though. I gotta stop abusing my hearing -
20-30Hz range is more so “felt” than heard, but still audible. I could hear a faint hiss soon as 16khz > came
sheeit. I can hear 20-30hz. -
Im blind, i couldnt see the play button. smh fml
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i aint hear ? ....forgot to plug my speakers back in
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I can here between 16-17000Hz. I can usually hear the buzz of tvs when they are on.
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part of the problem, y'all, is that you don't have the hardware necessary to play those higher frequencies at a level that you could hear them at anyways. Earbuds typically don't have the range to play those high frequencies and neither do most headphones unless they're designed for it like the joints made for studio use. Likewise most desktop speakers can't play those frequencies accurately either and laptop speakers damned sure can't. On top of all of this the audio chipset in your desktop, laptop, tablet, or phone may have a significant roll off with higher frequencies depending on the quality of the chipset and the digital to analog converters.
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BiblicalAtheist wrote: »I can here between 16-17000Hz. I can usually hear the buzz of tvs when they are on.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bEwtb2XExM -
I ? hate language.
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Man... -
Busta Carmichael wrote: »
Man...
I really wanna know tho...his full range isn’t COMPLETELY gone is it?