MidlifeFlyer
Well-Known Member
As I said, I think came across this some years ago,when ANR headsets were something new. I wonder whether the concerns are base on:But, that is kindda wierd about the letter saying that people can't hear warning horns and the likes. I don't think I have really ever heard of anyone having problems hearing it with any ANR headset.
1. people have reported difficulty in hearing cockpit sounds. period.
2. people have reported initial difficulty in hearing some sounds while their ears became more accustomed to the overall lower sound level (like your eyes adjust in low light
3. people who never used one gave opinions based on zero knowledge it wouldn't work and they would never wear one.
or
4. people testing the noise reduction circuitry in a laboratory figured out that people in a flying environment will have to have trouble and that curveballs can't really curve.
My guess is that the smallest group in the servey was #1.
Now, lets go back another 10-20 years to the early days of headsets, with even poor passive protection. Any takers on whether all four exact same arguments were being made with approximately the same distribution?