Hearing Test

Anything about MUSIC but doesn't fit into the forums above.
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Don't know if a similiar thread already exists but I would be interested in how high in the frequency spectrum you people are able to hear.

Make sure to turn the volume down on your headphones or speakers and gradually turn them up to a safe level!

http://www.noiseaddicts.com/2009/03/can ... ring-test/

Please post your age and the last frequency you can clearly hear (the tone, not some clicking etc.):

Me:

Age: 38
Frequency: 14 kHz
Edit: Hearing the 15 kHz when I turn the volume slightly louder.

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Go look at the manufacturer's specs of the headphones or speakers you're using. You can't hear anything beyond what your equipment can produce. For speakers, the acoustics of the room can also play a factor. You're not testing your hearing. Sorry.

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WHAT?
This is the same method MJ used when he was working on Anthony Marinelli's Thriller.

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RichieWitch wrote:Go look at the manufacturer's specs of the headphones or speakers you're using. You can't hear anything beyond what your equipment can produce. For speakers, the acoustics of the room can also play a factor. You're not testing your hearing. Sorry.
Well... considering that most hi-fi headphones have a supposed range from 20 Hz to 20 kHz, you should at least be able to test your hearing well within the audible range, unless the headphones totally mess up of course. Of course, i would recommend to do that on laptop speakers, because those most likely won't be able to get up high in frequency. I also wonder what those 21 and 22 kHz tests are supposed to do. Only kids with VERY good hearing should be able to hear those, if even.

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age 53 up to 20 Khz on some cheap Sennheiser headphones
"It dreamed itself along"

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mellotronaut wrote:age 53 up to 20 Khz on some cheap Sennheiser headphones
Hm, outstanding. :) Don't think i can hear higher than 15 kHz or something, aged 39. At least not, if i don't blast the volume up to max, which would kind of defeat the purpose of such a test.

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now i understand, why some noises are so unbearable to me :oops:
"It dreamed itself along"

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:D

Not sure if my tinnitus wouldn't mask the signal tones at some point... it's somehow gotten better the last years though, at least i don't hear it so prominent anymore.

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High frequencies are of course one - and not even most important for music pros/enthusiastics aspect in the "good hearing".

Most annoying/even fatal are "bumps" in much lower, e.g. in the upper midrange, somewhere between 2000-4000 Hz.

Of course the grasshopperg rubbing hind legs noice up to 35 kHz is sometimes nice to hear, too. :phones:

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Hmm the page doesn't work for me with windows 10 edge browser. Anyway,
I can hear 8-21k with my cheap Logitech pc speakers. I didn't try any headphones.

age 47

*My hearing has always been exceptional, my eyesight not so much...
Last edited by pekbro on Mon Feb 13, 2017 7:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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50, 10. :borg:

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Chris-S wrote:50, 10. :borg:
I would think that is about normal.

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There was this one Episode of "Doctor Who" from Series 5, Episode 2 - "The Beast below"... it had a couple of scenes in a "vocal booth" (that's what they called it") with old "CRT monitors" and they hummed and "whistled". I think it was supposed to be a subtle audio effect of a "line transformator", but I could hear EVERYHING... really annoying after a couple of seconds. Could barely stand watching that episode.

I'm in my mid/late 30ies.

And I could always hear what others couldn't. So I'd say I can definitely hear a tad more than 15kHz...
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