Register | Login | Set as Home Page | Bookmark | General Enquiries | Help | Wednesday, 03rd of December 2008
Health & Safety Matters
 hsmsearch.com
Search 
Magazine 
Register for our ENewsletter


What next?
 Request further Information    visit web site     Send to friend
 Aearo Technologies company's profile
Click to visit sponsors web site

Click to visit sponsors web site

Click to visit sponsors web site

Measures attenuation
February 1st 2008

For many years there has been a debate regarding the relative merits of various calculation methods for the estimation of the degree of protection provided by hearing protection devices.

No two users are the same; we all fit hearing protectors (particularly earplugs) with varying degrees of skill, and we all have different facial shapes and ear canals. Attempts are made to account for or allow for these differences. The Standard Deviation figures, which are provided for all CE marked products, are calculated from the test results for a panel of users and indicate how widely the results differed from the average (Mean) attenuation.

Using the Octave Band Analysis is a good indicator of what a user is likely to achieve, but it remains an estimate.

The point, says Aearo, is that we are trying to establish what protection a user is going to get and we are 'going round the houses' to get there.

Logically, we should be measuring what the user has achieved, not estimating.

The E.A.RFit system measures the attenuation achieved by an individual when they have fitted their own ear-plugs directly.

The ear-plug is probed; it has a fine flexible tube through it that allows measurement of the noise reaching the inner ear. One microphone measures this level; a second measures the noise outside.

From these two levels, it is possible to calculate the protection achieved by the individual with ear-plugs they have fitted themselves.

More articles from Aearo Technologies: