A list of puns related to "Noise Related"
Apartment neighbor noise. Impact noise from above. It really pisses me off. And I havenβt found any coping mechanisms or tactics to manage the stress and anger it causes, which Iβm sure is unhealthy. I hate that I canβt control it and relax when I want to, in my own home, because of it. My therapist recommended a breathing exercise where you breathe in for 4 seconds, hold for 4, then take 4 to breathe out but it does very little.
I can accept the light bleeding since apparently it's something common. But I'm noticing an high-pitched sound coming from the device, and it's more noticeable when the screen brightness is between 30 and 60%. At 100% is much less noticeable, but I can still hear it if I stick my ear to the device.
Anyone else experiencing this issue?
PD: *pitched*
Can I do something if the party palace just a meter away from my room blasts "saali manpareko chutiya geet" at max sound and "jhim jhim pareli"(baaja ma) when I'm studying or trying to rest and disturb my day to day activities and peace?
Can they do anything if I buy a speaker surround it with a disk and blast break-up, separation related, dark songs aiming at the party palace on weddings?
Maybe even restaurant workers if itβs a loud spot. I just wanna see. I know tinnitus is common for musicians. Knowing how loud clubs and bars can get itβs just a bit surprising I guess that we donβt talk about how hazardous those jobs are for ears.
This water heater is just a little over a year old. It is gas powered. I have an expansion tank on the cold line right in front of it with 50 PSI air pressure in it. The emergency pressure valve works fine. When the burner kicks on, this high pitch noise slowly builds until its quite loud and can be heard through the whole house. When the water heater is making this noise, removing potential pressure from the line by opening faucets or dumping water from the drain valve (like shown in this video) does nothing to the noise. But turning off the burner makes it stop immediately. Any ideas on how to fix it so it doesn't make this noise any more? It only happens when the burner is on. I've tried a full flush, and it didn't have any buildup. T he expansion tank WAS waterlogged, and I thought that was going to be the problem, but I've replaced it and the noise is still present. I have searched all over the web for solutions on this problem and I'm either awful at searching the correct terms, or its just not something very well documented out there. Any help or ideas on how to further troubleshoot this would be greatly appreciated.
Here is a video of the sound happening, draining a few gallons to test lowering line pressure, and then showing how the sound stops by shutting off the burner and resumes by turning the burner back on.
05 V8 2WD with 259k miles.
Started hearing a pinging-type noise that you could imagine how it would sound if there was metal wire wrapped around the driveshaft and whacking metal, which is what I looked for when I first heard it. Did a thorough look around the drivetrain tonight while doing an oil change and found no signs of anything. Also had thoughts that I finally got the V8 exhaust manifold tick, but it's not consistent and doesn't seem to show a relationship to engine RPM.
Here's what I have been able to observe so far:
Haven't heard it while idling, or while reving in Park
Most consistent time is while slowing to a stop, once I get down to like under 10 MPH, and the sound slows down along with my speed. Once barely rolling, it'll slow down to like once a second. This is where I definitely can tell it has a relationship to wheel RPM.
Have heard it faster at moderate speeds, but not consistently.
Yesterday was able to hear it driving at 45 MPH only when I press on the gas slightly more.
Inside the cabin it sounds kinda like it's coming from the back half of the car but not sure. With windows down it's less clear where it may be coming from.
One of my thoughts is maybe a broken TPMS flying around inside my tire, but I feel like it would be more consistent at slow speeds, and would probably never hear that at higher speeds I'd imagine.
No other symptoms other than this sound from what I noticed. Any possible rear diff issues that would do something like this? Transmission?
...not that I don't agree with those takes, let me throw my voice into that protest, but this isn't related.
I feel like the Drop Wall needs to have a quicker deployment animation. Personally, I'd prefer to use it reactively instead of proactively. As it is, 9/10 situations will have me picking up literally any other equipment.
Loving the gameplay so far though, and stoked for the campaign. Hope the devs are enjoying their well deserved time off away from the noise for a few days! I wouldn't want to be in that team when they come back to the office next week...
The tick is quiet, it sounds like it's coming from the exhaust manifold side of the engine. (2010 Ford Focus btw)
Hey so as the title states my e brake is completely shot, when I push the pedal down the car still rolls back no problem and the brake light doesn't turn on when the pedal is pushed down. Now when I'm driving at speeds 0-35 there is a god awful scraping and rattling sound. Truthfully I really don't know shit about cars but my entire normal braking system was serviced in the month so I would think this sudden scraping/rattling sound and the broken E brake must be related but I'm unsure and wanted to get opinions on it. If these things are related is there anything I can do myself to fix the noise myself?
Happens way more when riding it. Happens more under load, as in, riding it + carrying groceries.
To produce the noise without riding the bike:
Flip bike over
Crank throttle all the way from start. Sometimes this is enough.
Crank throttle all the way from start, then immediately drop throttle to low throttle, around 5-10%, noise will be produced and stays there as you gradually increase the throttle. Does not get louder as you increase throttle.
Noise goes away when the power to the hub motor is completely gone. So either letting go of the throttle or lightly pressing the brake to trigger power cut from motor.
Noise is not there after power cuts off even while the wheel is still spinning.
Noise is still there even with the brake off so it's not the brake.
Noise is not there when pedaling.
Noise is only there when throttle is applied.
The bike motor also shudders/stutters for a sec when taking off.
Mysteriously, after I took the wheel off, rotated the axle a bit, realigned the tire best I could and tightened it up, the noise is reduced by 60-70% and the stutter was also reduced by half as well. Although both still present.
This is the second time it's been reduced from axle adjustment. So I know there is a connection to it.
I had a flat a few weeks back, changed the tube, tightened it up, noise was reduced. Got a new brake for unrelated reasons, noise came back. This morning, I adjusted the axle, noise was back to being reduced but still present.
I checked the wires in the controller box. All wires are completely connected.
Question:
Why would adjusting the axle affect this? Is the motor dying?
This water heater is just a little over a year old. It is gas powered. I have an expansion tank on the cold line right in front of it with 50 PSI air pressure in it. The emergency pressure valve works fine. When the burner kicks on, this high pitch noise slowly builds until its quite loud and can be heard through the whole house. When the water heater is making this noise, removing potential pressure from the line by opening faucets or dumping water from the drain valve (like shown in this video) does nothing to the noise. But turning off the burner makes it stop immediately. Any ideas on how to fix it so it doesn't make this noise any more? It only happens when the burner is on. I've tried a full flush, and it didn't have any buildup. The expansion tank WAS waterlogged, and I thought that was going to be the problem, but I've replaced it and the noise is still present. I have searched all over the web for solutions on this problem and I'm either awful at searching the correct terms (totally possible), or its just not something very well documented out there. Any help or ideas on how to further troubleshoot this would be greatly appreciated.
In the comments, I have a video of the sound happening, draining a few gallons to test lowering line pressure, and then showing how the sound stops by shutting off the burner and resumes by turning the burner back on.
Thank you in advance!
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