View Single Post
  #19   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 29-03-2008, 12:47
mathking's Avatar
mathking mathking is offline
Coach/Faculty Advisor
AKA: Greg King
FRC #1014 (Dublin Robotics aka "Bad Robots")
Team Role: Teacher
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Rookie Year: 1999
Location: Columbus, OH
Posts: 642
mathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond reputemathking has a reputation beyond repute
Re: OSHA, Safety and event volumes

I have been to a couple of FIRST regional competitions where I thought the volume was too loud. My phone has a cool decibel meter in it, and (I used to DJ for extra cash so I am geeky about this) I routinely check the sound level whenever there is loud music. At Buckeye I never saw a reading above 80 Db. And I didn't have to strain to talk to anyone where our team was sitting or in the pits. Though I would still like to thank the Tiger Techs of 963 for the ear plugs they were handing out. At Buckeye, the position of speakers down for matches was such that the really loud sound was as you walked in (again, thanks to 963), but where the alliances waited for matches was below and between speaker sets, so the noise level was not that bad, meaning nothing close to the red zone on my meter.

I do think the sound is likely to vary significantly from regional venue to regional venue. Different systems and different accoustical properties. As I said, I have been to regional competitions as an observer at which the music was loud enough to do the old DJ trick of twisting up a bit of napkin for each ear. But the original post is dead on that, given FIRST's emphasis on safety, it is something that each regional should examine to make sure the noise level is not dangerously loud.
__________________
Thank you Bad Robots for giving me the chance to coach this team.
Rookie All-Star Award: 2003 Buckeye
Engineering Inspiration Award: 2004 Pittsburgh, 2014 Crossroads
Chairman's Award: 2005 Pittsburgh, 2009 Buckeye, 2012 Queen City
Team Spirit Award: 2007 Buckeye, 2015 Queen City
Woodie Flowers Award: 2009 Buckeye
Dean's List Finalists: Phil Aufdencamp (2010), Lindsey Fox (2011), Kyle Torrico (2011), Alix Bernier (2013), Deepthi Thumuluri (2015)
Gracious Professionalism Award: 2013 Buckeye
Innovation in Controls Award: 2015 Pittsburgh
Event Finalists: 2012 CORI, 2016 Buckeye

Last edited by mathking : 29-03-2008 at 12:51.
Reply With Quote