1) Measure the background
ambient during a 10-minute interval.
2) Long-term background ambient measurement
procedures are similar to procedures to measure the property-line noise source
itself. Eliminating short-term background ambient transient sounds from the
measurement of average long-term background ambient sound level, proceeds in a
manner similar to the measurement of the property-line noise source emissions
themselves. The two methods for measurement are:
A) to divide the 10-minute measurement into
short blocks of data; or
B) inhibit
data collection when short-term background transient sounds occur. The same
method must be used for gathering both the property-line noise source data and
the corresponding long-term background ambient data. The measurement procedures
for each method are given in subsections (b)(3), (b)(4) and (b)(5).
3) Using Small Blocks of Data
A) Divide the 10-minute measurement of
long-term background ambient into short measurement blocks. The duration of
these blocks in seconds (T) must:
i) remain
constant during the entire measurement, both when measuring the long-term
background ambient and when measuring the property-line noise source;
and
ii) divide exactly (without
remainder) into 600 and must be neither greater than 100 seconds nor less than
10 seconds.
B) Discard
data for any measurement block corrupted by one or more short-term ambient
transient sounds. The number of remaining, non-discarded measurement blocks is
designated NBA, where BA stands for
background ambient.
C) The
Leq for each octave-band (or 1/3 octave-band) are
time-averaged on an energy basis over the NBA remaining
measurement blocks to obtain average long-term background ambient
Leq per band. Equation 1 (see subsection (a)(1)(E)) is
used for this calculation with NBA replacing
NPLNS as the number of elemental blocks to be summed.
The total duration of the measurement in seconds, TBA,
is given by NBA multiplied by T.
4) Continuous Data Collection
A) Adjust the measuring instrument according
to manufacturer's instructions to continuously measure sound pressure and
accumulate (i.e. record) Leq. A switch must be available
to inhibit data collection whenever a short-term background transient sound
occurs, (and on some instruments, a button may be available to delete the most
recent, previous data).
B) Use the
switches or buttons to prevent short-term background ambient sounds from
corrupting the data.
C) Data
collection must proceed for 10 minutes. The result is the 10-minute, long-term
background ambient Leq in each band.
D) TBA is the number
of non-inhibited measurement seconds during the 10-minute measurement
period.
5) The minimum
duration, for either method, TBA must be at least 150
seconds. If TBA is less than 150 seconds, then continue
to measure the long-term background ambient beyond the original 10 minutes and
until TBA for the total long-term background ambient
measurement is greater than or equal to 150 seconds.
6) Measurement Alternatives. The long-term
background ambient noise should ideally be measured at the potential violation
site just before measurement of the property-line noise source emissions.
However, turning off the property-line noise source may not always be possible.
The following are a hierarchical order of five procedures for obtaining the
long-term background ambient noise. The first four procedures involve direct
measurement; the fifth procedure provides for use of tables of values obtained
from extensive measurements. These are not equivalent procedures but are
ordered from what is considered to be the most accurate to what is considered
to be the least accurate procedure.
A) Direct
Measurement Procedure-1: With the property-line noise source (PLNS) turned off,
measure the long-term background ambient noise within the hour before or within
the hour after measurement of the PLNS emissions at the location where the PLNS
measurements are being taken and with the measurement equipment used for the
PLNS measurements.
B) Direct
Measurement Procedure-2: With the PLNS turned off, measure the long-term
background ambient noise during a similar time period in terms of background
ambient sound level, within one to 24 hours before, or within one to 24 hours
after measurement of the PLNS emissions at the location where the PLNS
measurements are being taken and with the measurement equipment used for the
PLNS.
C) Direct Measurement
Procedure-3: With the PLNS turned off, measure the long-term background ambient
during some other acoustically similar period within one to 30 days before, or
within one to 30 days after measurement of the PLNS emissions. This alternate
long-term background ambient measurement time might be a Saturday night or
anytime during a Sunday or holiday. The measurements would be made at the
location where the PLNS measurements are being taken and with the measurement
equipment (or like equipment) used for the PLNS measurement.
D) Direct Measurement Procedure-4: With the
PLNS turned off, measure the long-term background ambient noise during some
other acoustically similar period within 30 to 90 days before, or within 30 to
90 days after measurement of the PLNS emissions. These measurements would be
made at the location where the PLNS measurements are being taken and with the
measurement equipment (or like equipment) used for the property-line noise
source measurements.
E) Measurement
Procedure-5: Tables of Long-Term Background Ambient Noise. If none of the
alternatives can be used, use the applicable long-term background ambient data
taken from Tables A through D in Appendix A. These tables are organized by
predominant land use and time of day (daytime or nighttime). There are separate
tables for octave- and 1/3 octave-bands. The background environments presented
in the table are based on extensive measurements conducted in the Chicago area
and are divided into the five categories listed in this subsection (b)(6)
compliant with G.L. Bonvallet, "Levels and Spectra of Traffic, Industrial, and
Residential Area Noise", Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 23 (4),
pp 435-439, July 1951; and Dwight E. Bishop and Paul D. Schomer, Handbook of
Acoustical Measurements and Noise Control, Chapter 50, Community Noise
Measurements, 3rd Edition, Cyril M Harris, Editor,
McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York (1991).
i)
Category 1: Noisy Commercial and Industrial Areas. Very heavy traffic
conditions, such as in busy downtown commercial areas, at intersections of mass
transportation and other vehicles, including the Chicago Transit Authority
trains, heavy motor trucks and other heavy traffic, and street corners where
motor buses and heavy trucks accelerate.
ii) Category 2: Moderate Commercial and
Industrial Areas, and Noisy Residential Areas. Heavy traffic areas with
conditions similar to Category 1 but with somewhat less traffic, routes of
relatively heavy or fast automobile traffic but where heavy truck traffic is
not extremely dense, and motor bus routes.
iii) Category 3: Quiet Commercial and
Industrial Areas, and Moderate Residential Areas. Light traffic conditions
where no mass transportation vehicles and relatively few automobiles and trucks
pass, and where these vehicles generally travel at low speeds. Residential
areas and commercial streets and intersections with little traffic comprise
this category.
iv) Category 4:
Quiet Residential Areas. These areas are similar to Category 3 but, for this
group, the background is either distant traffic or is unidentifiable.
v) Category 5: Very Quiet, Sparse Suburban or
Rural Areas. These areas are similar to Category 4 but are usually in
unincorporated areas and, for this group, there are few if any near
neighbors.