Showing posts with label hearing protection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hearing protection. Show all posts

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Safety Equipment

 


a hearing trumpet

I talk a lot about not injuring yourself while weaving, but usually that is in regards to repetitive motion injuries.  There is another kind of 'injury' that can happen and that is in the area of hearing loss.

When I first got the AVL with the double box fly shuttle I was a bit astonished at how noisy the high impact plastic hammers were, hitting the shuttle.  Or rather, the shuttle hitting the hammer.

Doug was working at an industrial supply place at the time, with a special interest in safety equipment so he brought home a decibel meter and quickly determined that I need hearing protection for high impact noise.  I asked if he could find something that I could hook up to my boombox so I could listen to music.

When we added the computer assisted dobby, the noise of the solenoids firing added more noise to the general decibel level and I continued wearing hearing protection to weave pretty much all the time when I wove on that loom.

When I 'retired' the AVL and replaced it with the Megado, it took one time activating the solenoids to realize that hearing protection was necessary for it, as well.

The audiologist was astonished when I said I'd worn hearing protection to weave.  She said most people didn't realize what was happening until they had lost a big chunk of their hearing.  But, I hadn't worn it for other pieces of equipment - the pirn winder, bobbin winder, cone winder.  While their noise was a lower level than the impact noise of the fly shuttle hammers and solenoids, cumulatively they obviously took a toll and in the end I now wear hearing aids (part time).

I have 'lost' part of the ability to hear soft consonant sounds, and especially during the pandemic, aids were even more helpful when I couldn't lip read.  

I'm not the only one who has experienced hearing loss.  On a chat group a much more famous weaver spoke up and said that she had just that day returned from picking up her hearing aids.  That weaving on the AVL with *no* hearing protection meant that she now needed aids to hear.  So yes, wear hearing protection if you are weaving on a loom that is noisy.  Not all of them are.

Hearing loss can be insidious.  You don't notice that you are losing sounds, especially when it is not across the hearing spectrum, but just a portion of it.  You can still hear ok and as it begins to get worse you adapt, usually by reading lips and/or body language.  Until one day you realize you can't hear the stove timer going off in the kitchen, or an alarm on your ipad when you are in the bedroom.  Even so, the tendency is to crank the volume not think about the fact that the problem might be *your* ears.

My first clue that something might be 'off' was not being able to follow conversations when there were many happening, in a noisy environment - like a busy restaurant.  I started to tune out instead of trying to follow the general chatter.  

So, tomorrow, I will wear my hearing aids when I go to the spinning workshop.  It is supposed to be 'masks required' so I need to put my ears in so I can hear what is being said.  

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

On Noise...



Am steadily working my way through the red/blue warp. It is now officially more than half woven. :) This is a shawl woven with 2/10 black Tencel in twill blocks. The ribbon you see pinned to the cloth is one of several I have in various lengths. Rather than use a tape measure, I bought some hemming tape in different colours, cut them to various standard lengths, and pin them to whatever I'm weaving to measure the length I want. For shorter lengths, I'll program the actual number of picks but for longer lengths, like shawls or scarves, it's just as easy to measure with a cloth tape.

About noise.....

Some looms, like the Leclerc Fanny (and almost every Louet loom I've woven on) are very quiet. With the Fanny all you really hear is the slight clatter of the metal heddles as the shed is changed, and the low whump of the beater as it strikes the fell. Not even that if the weft is being placed, rather than beaten.

Other looms, like my AVL, are extremely noisy - unless you weave v-e-r-y s-l-o-w-ly. Since I'm trying to earn money by weaving, I don't have the luxury of weaving slowly/quietly.

When I got my AVL in 1984, I realized that it was much noisier than any loom I'd woven on before, partly due to the sharp clatter of the plastic pickers on the fly shuttle, partly due to the larger sized everything - more shafts, bigger beater and so on.

At the time, Doug was working for an industrial supply house, with a particular interest in safety equipment. He brought home a set of ear muffs, specifically for high impact hearing protection.

Eventually I got headphones so I could listen to books on tape or music, but always rated for high impact hearing protection.

During a recent discussion on a chat group I belong to about wearing hearing protection, one weaver commented that after weaving on her AVL for 20 years - without ever thinking about hearing protection or wearing it - she now has 50% hearing loss.

While we all have to make choices, and ultimately it really does depend on how much you weave, if you have a large AVL at least thinking about hearing protection would be a good idea. Especially if you are a young weaver with many years of weaving ahead of you.