so, I picked up a set of these from walmart. Not nearly as sound deadening as a set of foam earplugs. The music was not the quality I would expect, but they were only $10. As for a safety standpoint, under my helmet, I could still hear cars and such around me. With a set of foam earplugs in I can hear my self breathe over anything else even with no helmet.
I really don't think the safety issue is a worthy arguing point. For me hearing is used more to know when to shift than anything else. Driving is a visual endeavor. We don't have to take a hearing test to get a license, and arguing that sound plays a part in safety is easily quashed when riding in a luxury car with the stereo at even a minor level. I realize that scoots aren't luxury cars, but I maintain that one can be perfectly safe while riding with vigilant use of other information, and retain hearing in the long run. Things that are necessary to be heard, horns, sirens and such, will penetrate foam earplugs or ear phones.
Yes, there are occasions that sound comes into play, train crossings come to mind. But to go blindly charging into such situations while relying on sound to safe your butt from playing squashed bug on a locomotive, is just nonsensical. In city traffic, I could see the need to hear, and in that situation, music would be an irritation to me. Blasting down K96 at 80mph, the wind noise is annoying, and music would help relieve some of the auditory fatigue that sets in after a couple hours of riding. Not only that, but the drone of the engine and the blast of the wind have caught me several times in vertigo like situations, where my mind nearly shut off as the road passed by. I think something to listen to would help keep the brain engaged in these situations.
I really don't think the safety issue is a worthy arguing point. For me hearing is used more to know when to shift than anything else. Driving is a visual endeavor. We don't have to take a hearing test to get a license, and arguing that sound plays a part in safety is easily quashed when riding in a luxury car with the stereo at even a minor level. I realize that scoots aren't luxury cars, but I maintain that one can be perfectly safe while riding with vigilant use of other information, and retain hearing in the long run. Things that are necessary to be heard, horns, sirens and such, will penetrate foam earplugs or ear phones.
Yes, there are occasions that sound comes into play, train crossings come to mind. But to go blindly charging into such situations while relying on sound to safe your butt from playing squashed bug on a locomotive, is just nonsensical. In city traffic, I could see the need to hear, and in that situation, music would be an irritation to me. Blasting down K96 at 80mph, the wind noise is annoying, and music would help relieve some of the auditory fatigue that sets in after a couple hours of riding. Not only that, but the drone of the engine and the blast of the wind have caught me several times in vertigo like situations, where my mind nearly shut off as the road passed by. I think something to listen to would help keep the brain engaged in these situations.
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