I used to go to a lot of drum and bass raves when i was younger. One of them was the valve sound system which is the loudest sound system in the world. The bass from the valve sound system makes your chest feel like it's being crushed. Good times but i now have tinnitus which is a constant ringing or buzzing noise in your ears. So my advice to younger people is be careful when going out to raves or concerts. Don't stand so close to the speakers and take ear plugs with you incase it gets too loud. Also don't blast your ears with music through headphones so much. Trust me you don't want permanent tinnitus so turn it down a bit and take regular breaks to give your ears a rest.
@@religiondoesntmatter krakatoa db was 310db and sound being fatal was 194Db which is just painful it even circled the earth 4 or 7 times and almost all countries heard a gunshot while usa or uk reported seeing a water rising like a earthquake aftermath which is kinda .-.
@@lifewasasimulationbcwhynot310 dB is just an estimated calculation based on the amount of pressure released Since no decibel meters were on top of the volcano
Hey Ian i am youre fan nice to meet you, you make amazing video's and I look to it everyday, I love it and I hope you will make video's in the future I love you Ian! 🥰🤗 And I like it if you read the comment and make the series have a end that makes youre video's exstremely vetter. I hope you have a good live and good with the goal of 69 million subscribers 😂❤️👻🦇
I like your content man, keep posting those creative stories. I'm really looking forward to when you write a book or make a film/anime, i'll be first buyer/watcher
This brought back some interesting memories. I burst both of my eardrums, however it did not hurt afterwards. When we arrived in the doctor’s office, there was a set C of headphones to test my hearing, but when we told him what happened he just said “most kids would be kicking and screaming in pain” and the one thing I said as my parents and my doctor looked at me was, “I-I CAN’T HEAR ANYTHING!!!” As I sat there quietly doing Absolutely NOTHING!
“Chamber” in music means luxury, classic, and experienced. In ranks like Symphonic, Concert, and Chamber orchestras, Chamber is the best and most experienced of them all.
I'm not sure the exact sound level of this room on average, but the decibel level required to injure/kill someone is 210. Loud enough sounds can kill you because the loud sounds cause extreme vibrations in your internal organs, enough vibrations could cause an air embolism to form in your lungs. The embolism then travels to the heart, leading to death. Alternatively, a loud enough sound could kill you because the air pressure may just become high enough to make your lungs burst.
"I didn't know ribs could vibrate" Yep. That's me near any bass speaker, drum set, or anything that gives off hard vibrations consistently. It gets bad enough in some places, like Carnage screaming in a theater with surround sound, that I had a massive headache for HOURS. Another time I was parallel to a drum set during church and had chest pains the rest of the day.
*It still blows my mind with how much time that I spend on RU-vid I still come across channels with 10+ million subs that I've never even heard of before.*
this room is basically how i feel in loud rooms. i have possible autism and anxiety (getting tested when i meet my counselor:)) whenever im in loud rooms its always overstimulating and overwhelming and it causes MANY panic attacks
As somebody who frequently experiences sensory overload (and cannot handle noises AT ALL unless it’s music i put on myself) I feel the pain watching this video
I can survive loud sounds only for 20 seconds until then i go insane and break everything trying to get out. There for i cant go into a magnetic resonance. Even if you do put me to sleep, ill force myself awake if i hear a sound. Theres nothing that can stop me, i just escape easily one way or another.
I spent 10 minutes in the bell tower of a Cathedral which has one of the largest sets of church bells in the World. I was stood a few 3 metres way from one of the smaller bells and the full set of 12 were ringing. I had noise cancelling headphones on to protect my ears otherwise I would have suffered significant damage to my hearing. However, the physical trauma to my body was still significant. A church bell is shaped like the human rib cage and has multiple harmonics. This means that my rib cage was resonating in harmony with one of the bells and that was painful.
And this is just one of the many reasons why I haven’t stepped into a cathedral or a big megachurch in years. Ugh! I like bells, but god damn, do they HAVE TO be so bloody loud and everything!?
"But it's not every day you can say you're sitting down under a tree with Cheeto dust on your fingers, in a suit you bought from amazon to impress a 73-year-old sound sorcerer after he let you stay in the world's quietest and loudest room in hopes of passing a celebrity doctor in subscribers on the internet". Yes, Yes Indeed Ryan
Loud noise is something I'm actually mostly pretty okay with (I work with children) - but what really gets me is high pitched noises. When I was at school, I sometimes complained about high-pitched whining noises, but only during certain classes. None of the other kids - nor the teacher - could hear anything and thought I was just making stuff up for fun, to distract from the lesson. I never fully understood it at the time, but the classes I heard those noises in...there was always at least one computer in the room. And those distracting and painfully high-pitched whistling noises I could hear but the rest of the class couldn't? It was the CRT in the computer's monitor running at 24kHz!
@@starplays07 I don't think - I don't generally hear high-pitched ringing sounds and I haven't heard that damned constant whining noise ever since CRT monitors were phased out in favour of flatscreens. :)
one thing people don't talk about,electricity has a noise,you can hear it but it's always not so noticable,but if you're in a room with so much electicity you can hear it and it's annoying,or as another person said you could have tinnitus
Pretty sure CRT monitors make a noise much lower pitched than that as I've always heard them too. Could hear if someone had a TV on somewhere in the house (or even in the neighbours house) even if they had it on mute as that high whine went straight through walls and windows. So glad we have flat screens now, much quieter.
From someone who has actually sensory overload quite frequently as I am autistic, this was painful to watch but it's nice to see a neurotypical person experience it and have it change their perspective.
I'm blind and I'm probably one of the most sensitive people you'll ever meet in terms of sound... it was also interesting for me to see how he reacted to this kind of stuff and I'm also impressed he was in there for 3 minutes. I would've not been able to stand it for 5 seconds.
I’m playing that song in my high school symphonic orchestra rn and it’s super difficult and pretty and also I don’t get how he survived that it’s super hectic with all of the parts trading off and using countermelodies
To be honest just based on his actions and movement in the room , as long as they were guniune, kind of makes me think that someone could experience a small form of what a lot of people with autism experience. Just like he said he was experiencing sensory overload. He said it was hard to sit still and by the looks of it, it seemed that way too. Now I don't want to offend anyone cause I really don't know that much about autism or the background behind it but what little I do know poses an interesting question. Is it possible to show and have someone feel something similar to what people with autism experience on a daily basis?
I was looking for this comment! I'm both autistic and have Sensory Processing Disorder (which just puts an emphasis on the sensory issues I experience), and I saw a great similarity between when I am in sensory overload, and the way Ryan was acting. Again, everyone is different but the way I would visually describe my sound overload would be that when I take in too much noise, my "noise capacity" is overfilled, so it begins to "overflow" into different parts of my brain. It feels like my thoughts, the things I touch, and especially what I see are all saturated with that noise. I feel so engulfed and trapped by what I experience that I am unable to think straight. The erratic movements that we see Ryan do in this video are very similar to the blind guesses that my overwhelmed brain makes as it tries to rectify the situation. And though it was meant to be funny, the line "I thought dancing would somehow help me" is an exact translation to the logic behind stimming (self-stimulating/calming actions for autistic people, like the stereotypical hand flapping or rocking but also jumping, spinning, etc), which I really related to. This video was a great representation of what it's like, and I think a really good way to teach empathy to those with sensory issues, especially since there aren't many other ways to simulate what an overload would be like. Your comment made me really happy, it's not every day that a neurotypical person is willing to try and think of a neurodivergent point of view :)
Howdy sleepyhead 😂❤Goodness I don’t know how you did it Ryan, I definitely think the loudest room is worse than the quiet room lol 😂 but I guess idk 🤷🏻♀️ unless I actually tried it!!!! I love your videos, you’re hilarious 😂