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I am not sure but if you use a decibel meter to check a real GP35 at 160' , do you think we could use that measure to adjust the motor sound of an N scale locomotive at 1' using the same decibel meter ?I have a tendency to say yes , what you all think ?
Loud N scale sound? No, thanks! It was cool for the first 10 minutes, then the attraction wore out quickly.
The answer is "yes, but..." There is no reason that the meter wouldn't work. The problem would be that you would then also experience virtually the same sound level at 3' (480 scale feet) or 5' (800 scale feet) or 7'- where it would seem much too loud. All the more so, because you are indoors with a lot of reflective surfaces (walls and ceilings, and uncarpeted floors). Sound doesn't "scale". I've spent much of my life managing auditoriums, and I've run my share of audio. In my last auditorium, while sound would diminish slightly with distance, if the band onstage was producing 105 dB in the front row, at the back of the auditorium, 100+ feet away, we would still register 90-95 dB on the meter.Let's say that a locomotive at 160' registers 80 dB. So, in your example, you set your sound card to emit 80 dB (or maybe 80.05 or some such)- to register 80 dB at 1' distance on your meter, at several feet away, you will still be hearing 79 dB (or more). (Decibels are not a linear scale- 80 dB is 10 times more sound pressure, not 10% more sound pressure).I am sure we have a few engineers and professors here who can give a more precise explanation. But for practical purposes, I think the best course is to set sound levels to whatever level you most enjoy, or for operations sessions, at a level low enough that it does not interfere with communications.
My methodology is "programming on the main" and then just showing it until it feels "right".Sometimes this is hobby is more art than science.