Hello Daniel, get your ears checked to know & accept that. It is a most common
hearing defect, developed among professional musicians. They can distinguish
even minimal differences in frequencies they are used to work with, but get
difficulties at higher & lower frequencies.



#############################################################
Am 13.11.2010 um 18:33 schrieb Daniel Canarutto:

> On 13Nov 2010, at 1:48 , [email protected] wrote:
> 
>> I think what some people may be hearing is either from limitations  
>> with
>> their own ears (I was surprised I couldn't hear anything beyond  
>> 12khz myself)
>> or  their computer speakers. Most computer speakers aren't the  
>> quality of
>> hi-fi  stereo speakers, and even if they were with a guy like me who  
>> can't
>> hear  above 12khz it may not make much of a difference anyhow.
> 
> 
> I was surprised that I could hear the E much better than the D. It  
> could be the equipment, but I was wearing headphones which costed  
> nearly 400 euros. Is it possible that hearing deficits are selective  
> for particular frequencies?
> 
> Daniel
> _______________________________________________
> post: [email protected]
> unsubscribe or set options at 
> https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/hpizka%40me.com

_______________________________________________
post: [email protected]
unsubscribe or set options at 
https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org

Reply via email to