Decibel Meter Pro Reviews – Page 4

5/5 rating based on 132 reviews. Read all reviews for Decibel Meter Pro for iPhone.
Decibel Meter Pro is paid iOS app published by Performance Audio

Don’t buy

Sunfoxx

I just bought it and it isn’t working at all. Just says 0 dB. I want my money back!


Great

Bobby&Nancy

Perfect portable sound meter.


Very convenient!!

Lexi0077

Great app :)


Fake app?

mrjavahead

Displays the same decibel range of around 25-35 even in total silence. Seems worthless.


Okay

Alby635

Convenient. Not so sure about its accuracy. Decibels seem high. Don't have a sound meter to calibrate it. Good for relative measurements, though.


Great app

Calmar75

I am a music teacher and also play on a band. Needless to say my ears are very important to me. I use the app to help my students realize just how loud they are playing. I use the with the band to find dead spots in the rooms we play so we can have better speaker placement


Great App

Captain FGD

This app is great for getting speakers to give optimal sound. Also good for testing boats, cars, and other conveyances that make noise. Captain FGD


Decibel meter pro

markWWs

I love using this app! It is accurate, dependable and very easy to use. I use it wherever I go in the classroom, concert hall or different various venues that have loud sound. It is a great reference to determine if you are in an environment that is safe for your ears. I love this app!


Only okay

GlichGSs07369

The meter works, but it’s only useful in the moment. It doesn’t track or hold any info. For instance, if you want to know how many decibels you were exposed to during the last hour, this is useless. #1, it only stays on as long as your screen is set up to stay awake, so to test an hour-long music class, for example, you’d have to change your phone settings to never auto-lock. #2, it will show the max decibel in whatever time period you left the display open, but there’s no way to see how long the sound stayed at that decibel. So let’s say the dial says the max was 103 decibels. Well, the World Health Org says you won’t get hearing damage if that 103 decibels was for less than 45 seconds, but unless you were staring at the dial for the entire time and counting in your head, you would have no clue what that max # means. If you leave the screen for any reason, like to answer a call, it resets to zero. It doesn’t test what the actual metric of hearing damage is measured by: both decibels and length of exposure


Works Great!

P•U•L•S•E

Nuff said