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Kanal Tipi Kulaklık(Kulakİçi) Kullananların Dikkatine!!! (7. sayfa)

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  • bende kanal tıpı kullanıyorm
    ama kullanmaayacagım gıbı duruyor artık
  • normal kullanınca birşey olmuyormu
  • kanal tipini yüksek seste dinlemezseniz birşey olmaz... hatta normal kulaklıktan daha sağlıklı olduğu söyleniyo bu durumda...
  • Ben de Pioneer'ın kanal tipi bir kulaklığını kullanıyorum ,ama anlayamadığım bu tarz kulaklıklarda son sese nasıl dayanılabilirki:S
  • arkadaşlar kusura bakmayın konuyla biraz ilgisiz ama, dün abd den özene bezene sony mdr-ex71 ve philips she9500 aldım. fakat elime ulaşıp dinlediğimde ikisininde baslarının ipod 3g nin içinden çıkan kulaklığımdan bile kötü olduğunu gördüm. ayrıca hemen kulağımdan düşcekmiş gibi duruyolar. ben ilk defa kanal tipi kullanıyorum da bi yardımcı oluverin. ben yanlış mı takıyorum acaba? öyle düşücekmiş gibi durması normal mı? baslarını iyileştirmek için neler yapabilirim???
  • Bu konuda bilgi edinmek için şu yazıyı okumanızı öneririm:

    http://forum.donanimhaber.com/fb.asp?m=19677901
  • Full seste nasıl dinlemeyi beceriyorsunuz acaba? O sese dayanabilirmi hiç kulak, günün birinde iflas eder böyle işte...
  • sağol arkadaşım w810 i nin kulaklığı öyle bi çözüm bulmak lazım teşekkürler
  • Bende kullanıyorum Creative Ep-630 ama kısık seste dinlerim ve düzenli olarak uçlarındaki plastikleri temizlerim problem olur mu acaba değiştirmeli miyim?
  • Geçmiş olsun arkadaşım.

    Bendede creative EP630 var son sese harbi dayanılmaz. Zaten dışardaki sesi %90 kesiyo orta seviyedede dinledin mi fıstık gibi valla Bu arada ucundaki silikonları çıkarıp temizliyorum bende
  • quote:

    Orjinalden alıntı: tech_türk

    Bu konuda bilgi edinmek için şu yazıyı okumanızı öneririm:

    http://forum.donanimhaber.com/fb.asp?m=19677901



    teşekkür ederim...
  • Aşırı müzik dinlediğim ve kulaklığım bozulduğu içn kız arkadaşım philipsin güzel kulakiçi kulaklıklarından almış bende söyliyemedim zararlı diye

    Sonum kötü gözüküyor.Dinlemeden edemiyorum.Böyle sesi hiç alamamıştım.
  • Benim Kulaklık SE Kanal tipi kulaklığı bak tırstım şimdi
  • Kullanmayın diyorsunuzda ,kulak içi kulaklıklar inanılmaz bir ses kalitesi sunuyor bırakmak zor.
  • Arkadaşlar öyle şey olurmu, korkmayın... normal ses düzeyinde dinlerseniz hiç birşey olmaz... Sonuçta bunlar bütün avrupa'dan izin alınarak çıkartılıyor, sağlıksız olsa izin verilmez. Tabi siz son ses de açıp dinlerseniz, o na kulak dayanır mı hiç?
  • Yarı kulakiçi kulaklıklı Sonyericsson W810İ telefonumdan 1,5 yıldır müzik dinliyorum ama bir zararını görmedim.
    Aşırı açmıyorum sesini.Zaten aşırı ses vermiyor ki telefon.
    İdeali hangi seviyedir acaba?



    < Bu mesaj bu kişi tarafından değiştirildi candogan62 -- 7 Ocak 2008; 21:48:54 >
  • hehe artik evde pc'den son ses acarsin komsular gelirse kulagimda rahatsizlik var böle dinlemem gerekiyor dersin
     Kanal Tipi Kulaklık(Kulakİçi) Kullananların Dikkatine!!!

    bence en güzeli



    < Bu mesaj bu kişi tarafından değiştirildi Rantr -- 7 Ocak 2008; 21:53:13 >
  •  Kanal Tipi Kulaklık(Kulakİçi) Kullananların Dikkatine!!!
    en güzeli neymiş kulaklık fısssssss
  • bende meslegım geregı rutın saglık kontrolune gıttıgımde ogrendım ısıtme kaybı oldugunu. bakalım tedavı devam edıo ınsallah duzelır bu kulak ıcıler gercekten banada sakat geldı normal bı kulaklık almak lasım sanırım
  • İngilizcesi olanlar baksın yabancı sitede denk geldi...


    http://www.hearinglossweb.com/Medical/Causes/nihl/nihl.htm


    Loud Music Causes Hearing Loss

    It is not uncommon among concertgoers to leave a concert unable to hear. In most cases their hearing returns shortly. Unfortunately, permanent hearing loss from loud concerts is becoming increasingly common. The situation can be even more serious for musicians, because they suffer more frequent and prolonged exposure to loud music than most people. It can also be more devastating for a musician to lose his hearing, because his livelihood and passion often leave with his hearing.
    Sound levels at concerts can be in the range of 120 to 140 db, well beyond the 100 db normally recognized as the threshold at which short-duration exposure can cause hearing loss. The loss is caused by damage to fragile tissue strands within the cochlea. These strands are called hair cells and resemble tiny hairs. They move with the fluid in the cochlea to stimulate the electrical impulses in the auditory nerve. The hair cells become damaged in the presence of loud noise.
    The mechanism of damage is much like the mechanism by which constant walking on grass can damage it. A person walking on a lawn occasionally doesn't damage the lawn, because the grass has a chance to recover between tramplings. But if the grass is subjected to frequent traffic, it soon looses its ability to spring back and becomes permanently damaged. Damage to the hair cells occurs the same way. The louder and more frequent the exposure to loud noise, the more damage the hair cells sustain.
    Fortunately, our ears often warn us when we have subjected them to potentially damaging sound levels. Temporary hearing loss is one indication; ringing in the ears is another. If you experience either of these symptoms after exposure to loud sounds, it's an almost sure indication of temporary damage that could become permanent with repeated exposure.
    For people who are unable or unwilling to remove themselves from noisy situations, earplugs can help preserve hearing. Earplugs are especially effective at reducing the intensity of high frequency sound, which is what does the most damage to the hair cells. A 15 or 20 db reduction in the intensity of high frequency sound can delay or prevent hair cell damage.



    Now hear this: Ear `buds' are cool, but the price may be too steep


    by Steve Svekis
    Editor: You may be getting sick of reading articles about the dangers of cranking up the volume, but I think it's great that the word is getting out. Here's an article about this issue, and it has a personal touch. Thanks to Steve Svekis of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel for permission to share his thoughts.
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Ring. Ring. Ring. For most people, that's an incoming phone call. To me? That's life in my inner ear. A continuous, audible ring (or is it a whir?) pesters me every waking moment. The condition is called tinnitus. In the early 1980s, when I felt invincible, I didn't mind my temporary bouts with ringing in the ears, which followed about two hours of live rock and roll cacophony at an acoustically challenged venue. Van Halen at the old Hollywood Sportatorium (more than once) comes to mind.
    Back then, the ringing was gone in a day or two. Somewhere along the way, though, the concerts and hours blasting the stereo in college caught up with me. Now, it's omnipresent, as if it were an ill-conceived tattoo from a lifetime ago.
    And, to think, I pounded my eardrums back then without the help of the insert-into-the-ear "buds" that have become common as MP3 players have exploded onto the market.
    According to hear-it.org, a Web site established to increase public awareness of hearing impairment (and which won a 2000 International Web Page Award for Best in Health), ear buds can send up to nine more decibels into the ear drum than a pair of conventional headphones at the same setting. That's approximately the difference between a vacuum cleaner and a motorcycle.
    The hearing damage occurs when tiny hair cells in the ear's cochlea are damaged. These hair cells cannot be regenerated in human beings.
    The iPod player is capable of producing 130 decibels (sound pressure level), though the maximum volume of a downloaded music file tends to max out at between 105 and 110.
    The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) states that people should not listen to noise at a level of 110 dBA for more than a half-hour in a day (www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document
    ?p_id=9735&p_table=STANDARDS).
    Should children be held to a different standard, though?
    Yes, says Dr. Ali Danesh, an associate professor of audiology at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton.
    "This is a particularly alarming issue for children," Danesh said. "You must factor in that the smaller ear canal of a child is exposed to a greater sound pressure level than an adult listening to the same signal. When the space gets smaller, the sound gets louder. That's just a fact."
    Danesh, whose FAU Speech and Hearing Clinic will be hosting Tinnitus Awareness Day from 9 a.m. to noon June 21, added that the portability of the fashionable MP3 players has youngsters not only getting louder signals, but also getting them for a bigger chunk of the day than in years past.
    So, what can you do to protect your kids if you're a parent?
    Apple has been proactive with the matter. The company offers a free iPod Software Update 1.1.1 (www.apple.com/ipod/download), which allows someone to program in the point on the volume bar that will be the new maximum volume.
    In the latest issue of Audiology Today, a table was produced to give people a general guide to help with pre-setting the iPod maximum volume.
    Some of the key parts of the table: At 50 percent, the iPod produces a free-field-equivalent measurement of 81 dBA.
    At 81 dBA, people can listen for 19 hours. At 60 percent, or 87 dBA, the maximum recommended duration of listening time reduces to 4.5 hours. At 70 percent (92 dBA): 98 minutes. At 106 dBA (the 90-percent figure), people should not have any more exposure than four minutes in a day.
    Also, noise-canceling headphones are a healthier option than the buds -- ranging from sub-$30 models all the way to the ultra-expensive fitted earphones that professional musicians use, which run for about $900. An online article by Apple expert Kirk McElhearn offers a variety of options to this end (www.ilounge.com/index.php/articles/comments/listen-safely-your-ears-and-your-ipod/).
    The headphones keep ambient noise (traffic, others' conversation, etc.) from leaking in, ostensibly allowing one to hear intended music without lathering it with harmful increased volume to surmount the background noise.
    Sure, many kids will listen to their favorite music as loud as is possible. Always. Just the way it is. As I said: been there, done that.
    And the minimally visible earbuds are usually going to be a fashion choice over the more bulky, reasonably priced alternatives.
    But I'm still hoping some will take the experts' advice, and not consider this effort so much background noise.

    Using proper headphones can prevent hearing loss


    Monday, May 1, 2006 7:02 AM PDT
    By Hartford Courant
    Printable version E-mail this article 0 comment(s)
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    It's an earbud crisis, not an iPod crisis.

    People keep pumping up the volume on their digital music players -- and damaging their hearing -- because those cheap little headphones can't block out external noise. When you're walking down a busy street, riding a city bus or taking the A train, the iPod's volume goes up, up and up when competing with the ambient noise.

    Though Apple recently released software for the iPod Nano and video iPod that locks in volume peaks with a special code, a pair of noise-blocking or noise-canceling headphones guards against hearing loss. With external noise blocked, music will seem as loud as those old earbuds but at reduced actual volume.

    The RaceQuiet Earphones from Outside the Box ($40; after April 30, $60) combine earbuds and earplugs, with a soft, foamy tip that's compressed by the user, like a standard foam earplug, then inserted into the ear canal. There it expands and helps seal out external noise. Noise-canceling headphones, like the $69 NoiseBuster (www.noisebuster.net), reduce external noise by picking up sounds with miniature microphones built into the earpieces and creating an inverted signal of those sounds electronically.

    The RaceQuiet brand and packaging -- a silver, round Altoids-like tin with checkered-flag graphics -- is an obvious play for the NASCAR crowd, but civilians will like the earphones' noise-blocking qualities. Sound isolation was quite good, though the company's estimate of a 42-decibel reduction seems generous.

    Sonically, the RaceQuiet (www.racequiet.com) is better than cheap earbuds but not as good as quality headphones. On the two sample tracks I used with both the RaceQuiet and the Grado SR-60 ($69) headphones the Grado headphones (www.gradolabs.com) revealed better bass, greater depth, more detail and more rounded vocals.

    But the SR-60 was not made for walking around town with an iPod. The RaceQuiet Earphones, when installed properly into the ear (a poor fit all but eliminates bass), are perfectly suitable for mobile music. They preserve hearing with volume levels that sound as loud as cheap earbuds but won't damage your hearing.

    Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.




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