Generally, the range of human hearing spans 0 decibels (dB) to 120-130 dB. The human hearing range in Hz (hertz) usually includes sounds between 20 Hz and 20,000 Hz (20 kHz). While the upper limit for the average adult is 20,000 Hz, the highest-pitched sounds most people can hear fall between 15,000 to 17,000.
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claiming that you could once hear beyond 20.000hz is a personal claim.
As there is not any need for any professional hearing test at younger age if there are ‘no’ signs of hearing loss, the claim falls short. Also it seems highly unlikely that they have performed any tests on claims of being superior. It for sure is a nice anecdote, though it does not really hold up in reality. I would give you the benefit of the doubt that it could have been somewhere closer to the 20000 hz cap, as in beyond the average. Also given the following quote:
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The highest frequency humans can hear is 20,000hz. And those who can hear that high of frequency are very rare, and probably very young.
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I remember the CRT pitch sound as some adults couldn’t hear and some younger ones could. Or better called the Flyback transformer of a CRT TV.
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The CRT sound was between 15,625 and 15,734Hz which is high enough that you almost certainly lose it as you get older. It now lives only in our minds. The responsible component in the CRT is probably the flyback transformer.