sophiecentaur said:
Your tables would be handy for getting a rough idea of how distance and height is likely to affect what you hear but, the angle changes a lot (reducing as the plane goes further away) so it would be risky to quote those values in a dispute because they are very approximate and could affect your credibility. If more detailed evidence is available then that's what you should quote publicly.
I think this is the key point -- or two points really.
First, I really don't care whether the sound is louder as the aircraft is approaching, directly overhead, or going away. I only care about how loud it is at its loudest point. And unless that is a significant distance from directly overhead so that the line-of-sight distance is significantly greater, it doesn't matter. In addition, the aircraft are on a glide path -- that is, descending. So that will offset at least some of the increase in the distance after it has passed by. And finally, the sound monitors that they have placed in three spots around the city are recording the maximum volume, which is all that the neighbors care about. But unless they are close to your house, the sound you hear would be different.
Second, and this is more important, several comments on the websites and here suggest that the human
perception of volume is subjective on several levels, so any instrument reading may not be a perfect measure of what one person or another would perceive.
In short, all I am trying to do is provide a way to measure the relative impact of increasing the elevation of the glide path, moving it farther away, or some combination of both. I argue that whatever the limitations of the numbers in my tables, they can do that job. And in fact, I argue that the percentage table is probably the best at that task. I have heard no complaints about incorrect equations there. It makes it quite clear that moving the glide path 0.75 miles away has the same effect (~50% reduction in volume) as raising the flight path by 1,600', something that the guy from the airport seemed to say was highly unlikely. Furthermore, raising the glide path by the recommended 1,100'
and moving it 0.75 miles away will reduce the volume by over 60%.
Do you take issue with any of that?