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Go with the one that has lower actual operating noise levels.


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The reviews for one of them says it's very loud and meant for constructions sites. Maybe one of them is quieter? (post a link if you find it!)

Get a Slim version, noise level is pretty much imperceptible compared to old one.

It’s not like the electric ones are significantly quieter for any given amount of power. Moving the air is most of the noise.

The electric ones might be slightly quieter (due to having less power), but then the trade off is running for longer because they have less power.


Purely noise related. The compressor based ones are much noisier.

What are the noise levels vs load?

Also, when talking about noise it's important to talk about frequency. If they produce low frequency noise, that can be far more irritating. Shutting the windows won't help much

It’s overall quieter, but with a pretty noticeable high pitched whine. Not sure if that’s better or worse for your ears on balance.

In some applications warfare and anything in residential areas (e.g. thermal or roof damage inspection), I'd expect that pilots will gladly go for the lower noise even if it means a bit less flight time.

That's my point about regulating the noise, not the tech. But objectively, I the electric ones I have heard are way more quiet (though still obnoxious). The gas ones basically sound like a chainsaw, and are louder and have more jarring harmonics.

Personally, I'd advocate a rake.


You really need both. Creating noise reduces the perceived ROI on the current programs, making them harder to justify.

I'm looking at a system now that is 45 decibels - 10db quieter than my robovacuum which is one of the quietest in the market.

This is what I use. I'm used to it but don't like it.

The noise doesn't bother me much. By the time it ramps up I'm asleep.


How is DC more noisy?

Er, how about make one side the "quiet" side and one side the "noisy" side? Address the actual difference rather than unrelated side effects.

I don't agree. Less noise means less vibration and harshness which means more mechanical reliability. It is economical to pursue at all price points.

Big fan of quiet. My home environment sits at about 30dB as measured by NIOSH’s sound level monitoring app, 32 during fridge cycle, 35dB when I have air conditioning running. In previous places I wasn’t able to control external noise as much and I had to use earplugs to focus; I tried half a dozen and found Etymotic’s earplugs to be by far the best (they claim to designed to reduce sound by approximately 20dB at all frequencies, which really feels miraculous compared to most ear plugs - they were at their best on long flights, where I could hear flight attendants and announcements just as easily with them in or out).

Two things in the article do jump out at me, though. One is that it talks about active noise cancellation - people do find this helpful, but there’s also a smaller community who find it causes problems for them, including worsening tinnitus. All else equal I would say it’s probably safer to reduce incoming sound as much as possible before using noise cancellation -it fundamentally involves “detecting noise and making more noise in a specific way such that the noises cancels out”. The theory is very sound (heh), I’m not suggesting it doesn’t cancel out, but there may be some very weird edge cases or subtle effects we don’t understand there.

The other thing is more of a nitpick, it mentions truck horns can be as loud as 150dB. That’s “standing 25 meters away from a jet engine at takeoff” level, like we’re talking “immediate rupture of eardrums” intensity here. I don’t doubt that you can buy truck horns that have “150dB” printed on their box, but I really doubt they’re actually that loud. And yes, looking at someone who’s done the research, only the very loudest of full size train horns that fill up a tank of compressed air get to just barely below 150dB - at 3ft away. At 100ft they all drop below 120dB. https://www.djdlabs.com/horns/


Technically, it is only 75% less noisy.

Perhaps being more lenient in noisier situations could be an interesting tradeoff then. At lower noise levels it's already pretty good...

Both seems plausible. I just wanted to note that noise pullution is often overlooked and much more impactful than people assume.
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