10dBA - Normal Breathing
20dBA - Mosquito or Rustling Leaves
30dBA - A Whisper
40dBA - A Bubbling Brook, or a Refridgerator
50dBA - Normal Conversation
60dBA - Laugher
70dBA - Vaccuum Cleaner or Hairdryer
80dBA - City Traffic or a Garbage Disposal
90dBA - Motorcycle or Lawnmower
I assume you're worried if a PC fan would be too loud for you;- lots of people would prefer a computer quieter than 40 decibles. I think anybody couldn't cope with a noisy 40dBA computer fan whilst trying to sleep.
Standing next to an average vacuum cleaner
131 decibles is extremely loud. The noise from the loudest sporting events is about 131 decibles.
It has 43 protons 43 neutrons and 43 electrons.
decibles(db)you choose the right answer, don't worry bye xxx
Forte is loud. Rest & Piano is quiet in music
Yes, some continuous loud sounds are related to hypertension (high blood pressure). In addition, sounds outside the audible range can make some people nauseous, etc., even if they are not all that loud. Loud sounds if sudden, sharp and loud enough, may damage your ear drums. An loud sounds experienced over a long enough period of time can damage your hearing.
131 decibles is extremely loud. The noise from the loudest sporting events is about 131 decibles.
A Snore can be as loud as 69 decibles
109 decibles
90-100
over 100 decibles, at least.
yes it does 20 to 25 decibles
Fundamentally, 43 decibels is loud. It is probably enough to annoy neighbors, but anything 85 decibels is enough to hurt hearing.
Decibles, or a decible, is the unit of measure when measuring sound volume. For example, in a concert, the volume can be over 500 decibles.
honestly it all depends on what amp your runing. check the specs of the subs, and one sub is pretty loud, if you can sit in your car and your ears hurt that's loud enough don't show off to go deaf.
43 dB is not so loud, when you don't want to sleep.
decibles
188 decibles