Irony Man

Dec. 1st, 2013 09:45 am
greatbear: (forearms)
That old saying that goes "if it weren't for bad luck I'd have no luck at all" seems to fit me so well lately. Seemingly unrelated changes to other parts of my body since the back surgery has me a bit more than miffed. In a "good" case, for years after a very nasty sinus infection, my left nostril would be nearly closed up at all times, becoming a high pressure annoyance at times when sleeping unless I used a nasal spray to clear it up on those days it was particularly bothersome. Since the surgery, it's been absolutely clear. How a spinal issue in my lower back becomes essentially a deviated septum is beyond me. I'll take any sort of unintentional victories I can at this point in time. Such celebration seemed short lived, however, after spending a far from insignificant amount of money upgrading my "main" home theater/stereo system in the living room as well as a secondary system I use in my lab for testing as well as pure entertainment purposes (the latter far more often) I have become profoundly deaf in my right ear. I'm hoping this is temporary at best, but if recent history of mine with tinnitus and occasional unbalance is any indication, I am better off listening in mono.

*sigh*
greatbear: (forearms)
Train Horns

Created by Train Horns



This is about a 12kHz tone. I can hear it. In fact, it's about the same frequency as my tinnitis, making it that much louder. When I was a wee young 'un (up through my teens) I could hear tones over 22kHz. My high frequency hearing was very sensitive. Thing is, it was more of a curse than anything. Television sets using conventional CRTs use a deflection yoke to scan the electron beam across the screen. The horizontal sweep frequency is about 15kHz. Television sets in use around my youth were generally old tube-based sets and even modern ones were rather inefficient. The scanning frequency would generally escape the set in the form of a high pitched tone. I could tell where a television was playing even of the sound was off and I could not see it. Living in a wooded area filled with crickets chirping gave me a loud cacophony to lull me to sleep. Even having these huge floppy ears just made things worse.

Being the rocker I am and given my love for loud music, my experimenting with audio and building amplifiers and such even before my teens, topping it off with untold hundreds of car audio wattage has taken it's toll on my once bat-like hearing. But a lot of that is also just getting old too.

No irony is lost in that hearing test being sponsored by a train horn site. I plan on fitting a set of train horns to my new truck eventually to help deal with other people's lack of hearing ability. More to the point, their inattentiveness from yacking on cell phones and being plugged in to their iPods.

Now, knock off that racket and get off my goddamn lawn.

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Phil

December 2016

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