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#1
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
"Bell" wrote in message news:ZgeKf.4232$yw4.852@trnddc05... And can I get these sounds and play them on PC? I want to repel some teenagers ) New gadget repels teenagers A new gadget repels gangs of teenagers by emitting a high-pitched noise that can be heard only by under 20s. Police are backing the Sonic Teenager Deterrent, nicknamed the Mosquito because of its sound, reports the Daily Telegraph. It annoys teenagers so intensely they have to clutch their ears. Eventually they can stand it no longer and have to move on. But because the body's natural ability to detect some frequency wave bands diminishes almost entirely after 20, adults are completely immune. The £622 black box, which can be attached to the outside wall of shops, offices and homes, sends out 80-decibel bursts of pulsing sounds at up to 16khz. It sounds to youngsters like a demented insect or a very badly-played violin. Howard Stapleton, a businessman and former electronics apprentice at British Aerospace, who was sick of youths hanging around outside his shop, came up with the idea. Working in his bedroom in Merthyr Tydfil, and using his four children as guinea pigs, he came up with a prototype of his device and asked the local shop to test it. "I got it so that only my kids hated it and my fianceé and I were completely unperturbed," he said. "We put up the prototype outside the store and almost immediately people stopped congregating. "The beauty of it is that the noise does not have to be loud, just pitched at the right level which affects teenagers." |
#2
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
"Bell" wrote ...
"Bell" wrote ... And can I get these sounds and play them on PC? I want to repel some teenagers ) Any kind of ultrasonic varmint/insect repeller device would likely work. Whether teenagers qualify as "varmints" and/or "insects" is left as an exercise for the reader. New gadget repels teenagers A new gadget repels gangs of teenagers by emitting a high-pitched noise that can be heard only by under 20s. Police are backing the Sonic Teenager Deterrent, nicknamed the Mosquito because of its sound, reports the Daily Telegraph. It annoys teenagers so intensely they have to clutch their ears. Eventually they can stand it no longer and have to move on. But because the body's natural ability to detect some frequency wave bands diminishes almost entirely after 20, adults are completely immune. The £622 black box, which can be attached to the outside wall of shops, offices and homes, sends out 80-decibel bursts of pulsing sounds at up to 16khz. It sounds to youngsters like a demented insect or a very badly-played violin. Howard Stapleton, a businessman and former electronics apprentice at British Aerospace, who was sick of youths hanging around outside his shop, came up with the idea. Working in his bedroom in Merthyr Tydfil, and using his four children as guinea pigs, he came up with a prototype of his device and asked the local shop to test it. "I got it so that only my kids hated it and my fianceé and I were completely unperturbed," he said. "We put up the prototype outside the store and almost immediately people stopped congregating. "The beauty of it is that the noise does not have to be loud, just pitched at the right level which affects teenagers." Similar effects from playing the right ("wrong") kind of music. I love the Wendy's by my neighborhood which plays chamber music (string quartets, etc.) Not many teenagers hanging about :-) And at least in our town (Portland, OR), you can use classical music to discourage the transients from using your sidewalk in lieu of a toilet where other methods have been banned by the city. Fidel Castro couldn't get elected to mayor here, he is too conservative. |
#3
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
"Similar effects from playing the right ("wrong") kind of music.
I love the Wendy's by my neighborhood which plays chamber music (string quartets, etc.) Not many teenagers hanging about :-) " Great story! (J. S. Bach and the boys must be thrilled.) |
#4
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
A new gadget repels gangs of teenagers by emitting a high-pitched noise
that can be heard only by under 20s. Police are backing the Sonic Teenager Deterrent, nicknamed the Mosquito because of its sound, reports the Daily Telegraph. Any 20 kHz oscillator fed to an amplifier and a good tweeter will work. But it might not be safe. If it's loud enough to annoy teenagers, it's probably loud enough to cause some unwanted wear and tear on the ears even if you can't hear it yourself. |
#5
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
On Mon, 20 Feb 2006 09:53:30 -0500, "mc"
wrote: Similar effects from playing the right ("wrong") kind of music. I love the Wendy's by my neighborhood which plays chamber music (string quartets, etc.) Not many teenagers hanging about :-) We have one of those. People of all ages go there to eat; the music doesn't repel young people. But it does seem to discourage antisocial types from "hanging around." And at least in our town (Portland, OR), you can use classical music to discourage the transients from using your sidewalk in lieu of a toilet where other methods have been banned by the city. Fidel Castro couldn't get elected to mayor here, he is too conservative. What are the other methods that were banned? Pest control in Oregon generally involves the use of rifles....... -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#6
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote ...
Pest control in Oregon generally involves the use of rifles....... That stereotype is rather outdated, thanks to modern liberal politics. Sometimes Hollywood is slow to pick these things up. :-) In the geographic (red) majority of the state, perhaps, but not in the blue parts (Portland, Eugene, etc.) They are even questioning why the police should carry guns. Remember that PDX is the only city in the country who refuses to cooperate with the FBI to counter terrorism. And we have the single largest gang of them convicted to date, no help from the state or city governments. Come to think of it, no, not even in the rural (red=conservative) parts anymore. The vote-majority city-slickers have passed laws protecting the varmints to the point where livestock and even humans are at danger from predatory animals to a heretofore unprecedented rate. When skiers start getting picked off by mountain lions, they may change their tune. :-) |
#7
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
"mc" wrote in message . .. A new gadget repels gangs of teenagers by emitting a high-pitched noise that can be heard only by under 20s. Police are backing the Sonic Teenager Deterrent, nicknamed the Mosquito because of its sound, reports the Daily Telegraph. Any 20 kHz oscillator fed to an amplifier and a good tweeter will work. But it might not be safe. If it's loud enough to annoy teenagers, it's probably loud enough to cause some unwanted wear and tear on the ears even if you can't hear it yourself. Supposedly it doesn't have to be very loud. 80-decibel bursts of pulsing sounds at up to 16khz. But you ever notice that teenagers like bass while it annoys most adults? |
#8
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
Bell wrote:
"mc" wrote A new gadget repels gangs of teenagers by emitting a high-pitched noise that can be heard only by under 20s. Police are backing the Sonic Teenager Deterrent, nicknamed the Mosquito because of its sound, reports the Daily Telegraph. Any 20 kHz oscillator fed to an amplifier and a good tweeter will work. But it might not be safe. If it's loud enough to annoy teenagers, it's probably loud enough to cause some unwanted wear and tear on the ears even if you can't hear it yourself. Supposedly it doesn't have to be very loud. 80-decibel bursts of pulsing sounds at up to 16khz. It's just a high frequency noise generator. The premise is that older people can't hear above 12k or so while teenagers can. Not a very good premise, IMHO. Some adults keep their high frequency hearing abilities, whilk some teenagers are deaf as a rock. Put on Paul Harvey. That'll drive away anybody under 60. //Walt |
#9
Posted to alt.support.hearing-loss,rec.audio.tech
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Does A Device Like This Actually Exist?
"Walt" wrote in message ... Bell wrote: "mc" wrote A new gadget repels gangs of teenagers by emitting a high-pitched noise that can be heard only by under 20s. Police are backing the Sonic Teenager Deterrent, nicknamed the Mosquito because of its sound, reports the Daily Telegraph. Any 20 kHz oscillator fed to an amplifier and a good tweeter will work. But it might not be safe. If it's loud enough to annoy teenagers, it's probably loud enough to cause some unwanted wear and tear on the ears even if you can't hear it yourself. Supposedly it doesn't have to be very loud. 80-decibel bursts of pulsing sounds at up to 16khz. It's just a high frequency noise generator. The premise is that older people can't hear above 12k or so while teenagers can. Not a very good premise, IMHO. Some adults keep their high frequency hearing abilities, whilk some teenagers are deaf as a rock. Put on Paul Harvey. That'll drive away anybody under 60. Harvey's good ) But I think one of those radio preachers would work. Is Swaggert or the Rev. Moon around? //Walt |
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