Think I went too far with the sound deadening....

ohbythebay

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Hey Bruce, this looks like your room !

lol

Just teasing you a little :heart:

But.... can you hear your heart synchronizing to the rhythm of the beat... accompanied by the sound of multiple other bodily functions? It brings me back to the sixties.
 
But.... can you hear your heart synchronizing to the rhythm of the beat... accompanied by the sound of multiple other bodily functions? It brings me back to the sixties.

No thank ya. A few years ago at the cardiologist they did an ultrasound on me (forgot what the test was called). The dumb nurse or whatever had the speaker on to where I could hear my heart and blood and all that and it just freaked me out, so I asked her to turn off the speaker. She refused and as a result the test took four times longer than normal because I was busy yelling, fighting and being uncooperative. I know I would not last in that room more than 20 seconds.
 
No thank ya. A few years ago at the cardiologist they did an ultrasound on me (forgot what the test was called). The dumb nurse or whatever had the speaker on to where I could hear my heart and blood and all that and it just freaked me out, so I asked her to turn off the speaker. She refused and as a result the test took four times longer than normal because I was busy yelling, fighting and being uncooperative. I know I would not last in that room more than 20 seconds.

:panic: I don't think that I would either, but I might give it a shot.
 
It looks like the Canadian National Research Counsil anechoic room (see below), it's been in existence for over 30 years. Actually it was back then used heavily by Floyd E. Toole , later a Vice President of Acoustical Engineering at Harman, and most if not all Canadian speaker companies have been using this site for their sound engineering.

ARCHIVED - Engineering and Construction - NRC-CNRC
 
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