IRBent - 2/12/2008 5:52 PM
It definitely depends on where you stand as to how much you hear. At the muzzle the gun is much quieter than the other air rifles tested. However, almost the opposite held true if you measure the sound levels at the trigger.
As you can see and hear, the Whisper has a deeper and muffled sounding report than does the RWS. Albeit actually louder from the user's perspective. I could defintiely hear the Whisper's deep long report in comparison to the RWS's short higer pitched report.
Since 3dB = 2x the sound level, then on low fequencies the Whisper was nearly twice as loud as the RWS. But on high frequencies it was almost half as loud as the RWS. Now for the kicker. The RWS had a short tight sound that was nearly half as long in duration as the Whisper. So when firing the RWS the sound was done but the Whisper was only half way finished making racket. The RWS's sound duration averaged .072 secs and the Whisper averaged .138 seconds.
this goes back to that vibration thing I was talking about.
in order to sound proof a room for example, you are not really "stopping" the sound, just converting it to another form, in that case heat energy. (if you go into a studio, there are NO 90 degree angles anywhere on the walls). that is why the size of a room will really matter when doing a test like this, as would any other clutter in the room, like say, a couch or something that will absorb ambiant room noise.
IRbent did a great job of recording and measuring the shift. it is very unlikely I will get the same results, unless I had a similar shaped room. thats why I mentioned I would post my X,Y,Z locations, to make it a little more useable. at this point I am more interested in the actual dB numbers just for that reason.
and just so everyone knows, the meters at radio shack are not that good of a quality, they are more affordable for a reason. Thats why I bought a high piced model ($450), that actually "records" the sound over a given amount of time, then analyzes it, and gives you the peak over duration, and comparative to what you (as a human hearing range) can actually hear.
it is very true that on a regular dB meter the sound would happen way too fast for it to recognize it.
-Mark