Extech Tech Tips: Sound Level


A sound level meter (SLM) measures sound pressure level in decibels (dB). It is commonly used to check noise exposure, verify compliance limits, and troubleshoot noisy equipment or spaces.
Monitoring helps you find where/when noise exceeds safe or acceptable limits, so you can reduce exposure and prevent hearing loss or disturbance.
Many regulations specify an instrument accuracy class (commonly per IEC 61672). Class 1 and Class 2 indicate measurement tolerance (accuracy) across defined frequency and level ranges.
Note (ANSI Type): Some documents use the older ANSI S1.4 “Type” system (Type 0/1/2/3) to describe performance tolerances. In general, Type 0 is the most stringent, Type 1 is precision, and Type 2 is general purpose (Type 3 is typically for survey/screening). IEC 61672 uses Class 1 and Class 2; Type 1 is often roughly compared to Class 1, and Type 2 to Class 2, but requirements are not automatically interchangeable—follow the applicable standard/method.
Standard SLM (handheld): Spot checks and short surveys. Common readouts: SPL, LAeq, Lmax.
Sound level datalogger: Records time-stamped levels at set intervals for unattended, long-duration studies.
Noise dosimeter: Worn by a person to measure cumulative exposure over a shift (occupational programs).
Sound level monitor (fixed): Continuous monitoring with real-time display, alarms, and/or network reporting.
Octave band analyzer: Adds 1/1 or 1/3 octave bands to identify dominant frequencies for diagnostics and controls.
Frequency weighting shapes how the meter “hears” sound. A-weighting approximates human hearing and is commonly used for workplace/environmental reporting. C-weighting is flatter (more low-frequency content) and is often used for machinery and peak/impact evaluation.
Fast and Slow control how quickly the reading updates. Fast responds quickly to changes, while “Slow” provides a steadier, averaged reading often used in noise surveys.
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