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Journal Article

Citation

Murphy WJ, Flamme GA, Campbell AR, Zechmann EL, Tasko SM, Lankford JE, Meinke DK, Finan DS, Stewart M. Int. J. Audiol. 2018; 57(Suppl 1): S28-S41.

Affiliation

Department of Communication Disorders , Central Michigan University , Mount Pleasant , MI , USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/14992027.2017.1407459

PMID

29299940

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This research assessed the reduction of peak levels, equivalent energy and sound power of firearm suppressors.

DESIGN: The first study evaluated the effect of three suppressors at four microphone positions around four firearms. The second study assessed the suppressor-related reduction of sound power with a 3 m hemispherical microphone array for two firearms.

RESULTS: The suppressors reduced exposures at the ear between 17 and 24 dB peak sound pressure level and reduced the 8 h equivalent A-weighted energy between 9 and 21 dB depending upon the firearm and ammunition. Noise reductions observed for the instructor's position about a metre behind the shooter were between 20 and 28 dB peak sound pressure level and between 11 and 26 dB LAeq,8h. Firearm suppressors reduced the measured sound power levels between 2 and 23 dB. Sound power reductions were greater for the low-velocity ammunition than for the same firearms fired with high-velocity ammunition due to the effect of N-waves produced by a supersonic bullet.

CONCLUSIONS: Firearm suppressors may reduce noise exposure, and the cumulative exposures of suppressed firearms can still present a significant hearing risk. Therefore, firearm users should always wear hearing protection whenever target shooting or hunting.


Language: en

Keywords

Hearing conservation/hearing loss prevention; damage risk criteria; firearm suppressors; impulse noise; instrumentation; noise induced hearing loss; psychoacoustics/hearing science

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