orcishgamer: So, I got a fairly nice pair of chat headphones for my 360... and yeah, I may be partially deaf. I seriously cannot hear shit, I put those on, suddenly I can understand the voices in videos and dialog on my 360 games is balanced. If I pipe a DVD over my speakers I still can't hear shit. Had to try and watch something on my PC, with 350 USD Logitech fancy speakers, can't hear shit. I finally shoved it into a cheap pair of Microsoft 20 USD headphones that I only use for MMO chatting and suddenly I can hear it.
Are all my speaker systems seriously that unbalanced? I find that hard to believe, I don't even have a bass on my TV's system.
Seriously, without headphones on I have to turn the volume so high on movies and video games that my neighbors get pissed. If I can I put dialog at 10 and game sound/music on 3 or 4, it is that friggin bad.
Okay, now I'm just complaining. I guess my curiosity is if this is just a "getting older" thing or what? Doctors that look in my ears tend to be surprised about the scarring on my ear drums, guess I had a lot of ear infections as a kid, but I don't remember them. Maybe that's it.
I guess I really will be spending a metric bucket load of cash on headphones for my computer too... sucks it's hard to talk to anyone else with headphones on, but I guess it's hard to talk to anyone with the speaker system turned up to "11" anyway...
I find myself a bit irritated about this... Pat me on the head and tell me it's normal or something, okay GOGers?:)
If it's the same device, it could also be the output or a broken cable. I'd definitely get an evaluation just in case, but if you're plugging different speakers into the same jack, it could be a broken cable or jack.
It is a bit suspicious that it's just one ear, if it were hearing damage due to listening to things too loud, I would expect for both ears to be roughly equally damaged. Of course, that's not a physical law so it's certainly possible.
It could also be a build up of gunk in your ear on one side. I have problems with that from time to time, and that's something that the audiologist would look for as well. I suppose it could also be allergies causing the tube on one side to swell preventing the normal exchange of gases to normalize the pressure behind the ear drum.
But, as TET suggested, go to an audiologist as that way all the possibilities will be looked at and hopefully if there is damage further damage can be prevented.
sai: I think I have an issue with being too sensitive to high frequencies. I could hear an old PC squealing for its life in the next room when noone else could. My old DVD player makes an annoying high pitch squeal. I have a portable speaker which isn't old but make a high pitch sound that annoys me, I suppose it could be a fault but again I seem to be the only one hearing it. A TV had been left on and there was a program about bats, from across the room I was wondering what that noise was whilst another person nearer said they couldnt hear it. I do seem to have Tinnitus too, a high pitch ringing :( Googling about it seems a few others with Tinnitus also have higher sensitivty to high pitches, but at least it isn't actually "painful" just annoying.
Depends on what's causing the ringing. I've got ears like a bat. And more literally than normal. I get problems with tinnitus pretty much whenever it gets quiet. I can usually drown it out by concentrating on music in my head. And thus replace the noise with auditory hallucinations. I've gotten pretty good over the years, I can reproduce, in a pitch perfect way, some amazingly complex music.
But yeah, I remember before the digital switch over that I couldn't go into the TV section of the electronics shop because it would cause unbearable pain and I've had trouble at times with loss prevention devices at some stores.
OTOH, I can locate things to within a couple inches with my ears and sometimes I have to navigate solely on sound as I can't see and hear and touch at the same time.