I was wondering if anyone knows where i can buy a decibel meter. i need one for my car so i can see how hard my 4 12s hit. i use to have 4 12s in my jeep but some idiot jacked all of my stuff and i decided to go with 12s... they are pioneers.
i would like one where its digital.. but analog is alright is its cheap.. hehe
i would like one where its digital.. but analog is alright is its cheap.. hehe
Alrite, thanks mark... I see on there website that they have two of them but i will go to radioshack tommorow and buy one, thanks again
IIRC the RadioShack dB meter only goes so high... 120-130db.. I could be wrong but you might want to check for the maximum limit as your car probably goes beyond that.
max on the RS meters is 126dB, if you want a real spl meter you're going to have to spend a couple hundred dollars
are there any hand held meters that can go to 150db? I need one......or maybe a diy approach perhaps???
dB meter
Try out Harbor Freight. www.harborfreight.com
$24.99
It should be accurate enough for your purpose.
I have one but I've never tried to calibrate or test its acuracy against a known (expensive) one.
Try out Harbor Freight. www.harborfreight.com
$24.99
It should be accurate enough for your purpose.
I have one but I've never tried to calibrate or test its acuracy against a known (expensive) one.
yeah we need something more than 120-130db i bought the one from radioshack and couldnt really figure how to use it... every time i tested it it said 70db... it was funny because i would yell and it said 70db lol... and i know my car hits much harder than 70db lol.. i need something to got up to 150db atleast....
Go to an SPL competition and have it measured there. My plan for this summer is to go one of these competitions and see if they would measure what my AV15 can do without actually competing.
Do it yourself method.
Since 130dB is the "Threshold of PAIN", you probably don't want to be in the car when you measure sound over that figure, so here's what you can do. Put the meter on the seat, and observe it through the closed windows. (or put plugs in your ears!)
1. Measure the sound level with your dB meter set for its maximum range.
2. Tape a ball of cotton over the mircophone on the meter.
3. Make the measurement again, and observe the difference in dB between the measurements.
4. Keep adding more cotton until you get a reasonable difference, such as 30 dB.
5. Your 120 dB meter now measures up to 150dB. When the meter reads 120 dB with the cotton over the microphone, it is actually in a 150dB environment.
Of course, the cotton over the microphone will probably change the frequency response of the meter, but the only alternative I can think of is to open the meter and install an additional attenuator between the microphone and the meter circuit.
Incidentally, I took my meter apart to see how difficult it would be to add resistors to the circuit, and the microphone is soldered directly to a printed circuit board, which uses surface mounted components. It might be possible to modify it, if you are a glutton for punishment. My meter only cost $25 so even if I can't get it back together, it was a cheap education!
Since 130dB is the "Threshold of PAIN", you probably don't want to be in the car when you measure sound over that figure, so here's what you can do. Put the meter on the seat, and observe it through the closed windows. (or put plugs in your ears!)
1. Measure the sound level with your dB meter set for its maximum range.
2. Tape a ball of cotton over the mircophone on the meter.
3. Make the measurement again, and observe the difference in dB between the measurements.
4. Keep adding more cotton until you get a reasonable difference, such as 30 dB.
5. Your 120 dB meter now measures up to 150dB. When the meter reads 120 dB with the cotton over the microphone, it is actually in a 150dB environment.
Of course, the cotton over the microphone will probably change the frequency response of the meter, but the only alternative I can think of is to open the meter and install an additional attenuator between the microphone and the meter circuit.
Incidentally, I took my meter apart to see how difficult it would be to add resistors to the circuit, and the microphone is soldered directly to a printed circuit board, which uses surface mounted components. It might be possible to modify it, if you are a glutton for punishment. My meter only cost $25 so even if I can't get it back together, it was a cheap education!
if your work can suffice in upto max of 100db,then use nokia smart phone(series 60), as a db meter.with a simple software,u can use it as a db meter.but if your req. go higher than it wont satisfy you.
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