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Hi guys. First car, decided to make it a Metro!; Sup
Topic Started: Nov 4 2014, 10:25 PM (1,789 Views)
Metromightymouse
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Nov 16 2014, 09:51 AM
Woodie
Nov 16 2014, 06:50 AM
This has degenerated into a silly pissing match, but I do find the base question fascinating. There is no question that distorted sound is far more likely to cause damage to speakers or amplifiers, but is it also more likely to damage your hearing? I've never heard that before, but then again, I've never even considered it. I don't know how you would differentiate the fact that someone who has so little quality judgement that they would sit and listen to obviously distorted sound is probably far more likely to listen at insanely high levels.

The link that myredvert provided doesn't address this at all, they are using the word noise in a different way than a stereo aficionado would. It's proving a challenging search because every mention of hearing loss goes straight to "sometimes loss, sometimes distortion".
Yes, it surprised me too, first time I came across it. But scientifically, does make perfect sense.
Where did you come across it?
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joluthgo
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