Inspired by this article, where a Texas family claim that an “Amber Alert” on their son’s Airpods caused his eardrum to rupture.
At least some parts of the case have been dismissed:
https://www.casemine.com/judgement/us/6354c39e5358106ecd0d9f1d
https://casetext.com/search?q=Gordoa v. Apple&sort=relevance&p=1&type=case
According to this, sound levels starting from 165 decibels would cause eardrum rupture: https://evidence.unboundmedicine.com/evidence/view/EBMG/457351/all/Acute_acoustic_trauma#:~:text=An intense sound wave will,also rupture the tympanic membrane
Question: Are the Apple Airpods physically capable of producing 165 decibels of sound?
Almost certainly not by sound, but creating a seal in an ear canal can make it significantly easier to rupture an ear drum. Even a slap up side the head can rupture an ear drum if you get a good seal to their ear before all the trapped air gets crushed. Remarkably easy if it’s the second time, I’d know! 20% hearing loss sucks.
Giving him the benefit of the doubt, maybe the alert startled him and he slapped his ear in surprise trying to dig it out. Or maybe stacked on an injury. Or he could always be a weirdo with thin membranes. We’re not all clones!
Step 1: Discombobulate.
Why do you keep asking the same question over and over?
According to a test conducted by the source below, they max out at 108.3 db, so I guess the claimants are full of shit.
Doesn’t actually mean their eardrums didn’t rupture from the airpods, just that under those testing conditions they can’t generate the imposed constraint of 130 dB.
And because of the logarithmic nature of decibels, 6 dB louder approximately means twice as loud. So these claimants are saying the airpods reached about 700 times higher volume than they can.
Absolutely not, they would burst before that. Even big over ears are physically incapable of producing such loud sounds.
Kid probably just stuck some crayons in his ears and now the family wants to get money from apple.