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Henry Wood
03-21-09, 05:38 PM
I am most lax in passing on my thanks to all of the modders whose efforts I have used over the years so I am trying to make amends.

First of all, I discovered a mod last week which helped those like myself with hearing problems in making the hydrophone station very much easier to use. This made a great difference to my appreciation of the game and I sincerely thank the creators.

I suffer from tinnitus possibly brought on by working in very noisy environments before ear defenders were ever thought of. For example when I started working in the North Sea oil patch in the early 70s I don't think ear plugs had even been invented and we only wore hard hats when it was raining.:down: Oh well...

Anyhoo... I used to use one of them "ambient sound machine" thingys to help me get off to sleep because total silence really disturbs me by the whistling etc in my ears. I used to play a sound chip of "waves breaking on the shore". Nowadays, I keep myself right in the mood by using quite a few of the "amb_SubmarineInterior.wav" files to be found among the many mods available. I think the latest one I have used is actually from "Das Boot" and just when I was drifting over to sleep after listening in on a couple of chaps whispering and murmering amongst themselves, I received a very rude awakening when someone started yelling at the others. I almost yelled back at him - "Hey! shaddup! Some of us are trying to sleep!" There is also the clown who keeps opening the door to the engine room and letting us all hear the throb of those engines. I suppose life was just like that in the real things.

It's all good fun and keeps me in the mood.

TheDudTorpedo
03-21-09, 05:45 PM
Hehe - thats great Henry :DL

Just one question though : what happens as you are drifting off to sleep and someone shouts "ALLLLAAAARMMMMM!"? :haha:

Laufen zum Ziel
03-21-09, 05:48 PM
I get ringing/buzzing in my ears a lot when I am trying to sleep.
I listen to music from Celtic Women albums. I dont know what
they are saying but it is soft and sweet. Puts me out like a light.

Henry Wood
03-21-09, 07:12 PM
Hehe - thats great Henry :DL

Just one question though : what happens as you are drifting off to sleep and someone shouts "ALLLLAAAARMMMMM!"? :haha:

:woot:Well, he ain't yelled "ALLLLAAAARMMMMM!"? as yet, and if the dirty dog ever did I think me and him would soon part company, like he would see the fastest ever transfer out of my boot! LOL!

Seriously though, the tinnitus is a curse of the first degree and any kind of strange but consistent background noise does seem to help to mask it. Like I said, getting over to sleep is my main problem: to most people a nice quiet room would be ideal to help slip over to sleep, but in my case, a quiet room is a curse.

[I don't know what sounds other sufferers encounter, but mine is usually a constant kind of high pitched "sizzling" like a pan of bacon is frying. OK if you're hungry, but no darned good if you're tired.]

Henry Wood
03-21-09, 07:19 PM
I get ringing/buzzing in my ears a lot when I am trying to sleep.
I listen to music from Celtic Women albums. I dont know what
they are saying but it is soft and sweet. Puts me out like a light.

I don't know no Celtic Women even though I live in Scotland! :DL

Seriously (again) what I have found is that any background noise I play regularly, and therefore get used to, has the effect of masking my "ear noises". I have even grown used to Hans Albers most welcome German seafaring songs getting me over to sleep. (I feel like a true U-boots man when Hans Albers sings me to sleep with his songs of the Reeperbahn and St. Pauli!) I wish I lived in those days.

Jimbuna
03-22-09, 07:55 AM
Looks like the HASAWA 74 came too late for you my friend. :hmmm:

Pleased to see you've found a way to overcome/alleviate your condition :up:

Murr44
03-22-09, 02:16 PM
I run a pedestal fan pointed away from the bed. It helps to block out most of the "ambient sound" (f-ing raccoons squabbling - you wouldn't believe how loud these things can shriek) from the laneway behind my place. The only downside is that now I find that I'm "addicted" to the fan's sound & I have difficulty sleeping if I'm away from home.:zzz:

Splash1
03-22-09, 02:53 PM
[I don't know what sounds other sufferers encounter, but mine is usually a constant kind of high pitched "sizzling" like a pan of bacon is frying. OK if you're hungry, but no darned good if you're tired.]


Mine is a sound akin to the constant drone of cicadas (locusts). The likely result of several years of American Civil War re-enacting (and being too "authentic" to wear proper ear protection against close-in musket and artillery blasts).

Listening to ambient SHIII sounds is a novel approach to coping. My tinnitus, fortununately, doesn't keep me awake. It actually serves as its own sort of built-in 'white noise' to mask other occasional bumps in the night.

Laufen zum Ziel
03-22-09, 07:35 PM
WOW. Is there no topic that this forum can not handle?

Oneshot/Onekill
03-24-09, 08:54 PM
@Henry Wood. I feel your pain, After 8 yrs of Browning M2 .50cal automatic firing. .50cal Barret sniper rifle firing and Remmington .308 sniper rifle firing in the US marines. Alot of it w/o hearing protection, such as during my 7 month vacation in Mogadishu Somalia, among other places, I only occasionally get ringing in my ears as i'm trying to fall asleep.

May you find restful nights my friend

Semper Fidelis.:up: