Anonymous wrote:See you in 20 years
Used to have a rule about planes after 10pm. Used to have a rule about lower sizes of planes. Used to have a rule that had max miles planes could fly from DC- they have inched that up over time.Anonymous wrote:Blame Congress, they chiseled away at the plane limitations at National over the passed decades. One reason, I could never support John McCain.
Anonymous wrote:I found this very useful when moving to the area. There are noise sensor networks for both DCA and IAD.
https://webtrak.emsbk.com/dca
https://webtrak.emsbk.com/iad
You can watch (not in real time, delayed by about an hour) the noise levels rise and fall with planes on various flight paths in the area. Historical data is also available, beyond that data feed, so you can look at different times of day.
Once I had the dB levels, I googled to find charts of what a certain number of decibels equated to in noise levels. (As loud as a normal conversation? As a drill? etc.).
This stuff is out there, it's public. As someone who was looking at buying in the area, once I picked up from the forums here that there were places where airport noise was an issue, I started googling and that's how I came across the sensor network info. (I also looked at flood maps and other historical flood data, tornado records, water treatment/sewage plants in the area, etc.) I know that most people don't do that level of due diligence, but it certainly helps avoid some things.
Even with the level of research I did, though, I didn't realize there are still helicopters from Mt. Weather that frequently fly over so low that my house shakes. It's very, very difficult to catch every possibility of something disruptive, when you don't live in an area already.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who are bothered by plane noise seriously bother me. Especially being that far out.
I walk/run by DCA several days a week - it's about 1.5 mile from my home on paths, and considerably shorter if you draw a direct line. It's white noise. And you physically FEEL takeoff and landing sometimes.
Not a big deal, but a tradeoff for living in the neighborhood we choose to live in.
If you're that abnormally sensitive, move elsewhere and don't complain about not having an airport you can get to easily.
The airport is 1.5 miles from your house?
Another poster who has never been to DC or NoVa.
I didn't understand the "I run by DCA several times a week." Why is that important? Isn't the more important part where the person lives and whether the house is under a flight path.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who are bothered by plane noise seriously bother me. Especially being that far out.
I walk/run by DCA several days a week - it's about 1.5 mile from my home on paths, and considerably shorter if you draw a direct line. It's white noise. And you physically FEEL takeoff and landing sometimes.
Not a big deal, but a tradeoff for living in the neighborhood we choose to live in.
If you're that abnormally sensitive, move elsewhere and don't complain about not having an airport you can get to easily.
The airport is 1.5 miles from your house?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s always someone trying to deflect from the real issue. That people should stop buying in these areas or if they do get it for cheap because you’ll pay in chronic disease, stress etc
Classic DCUM. There are no bad polices and there's never a reason to fight to improve the status quo. It's all about people who made poor choices and their problems aren't deserving of attention.
Anonymous wrote:It’s always someone trying to deflect from the real issue. That people should stop buying in these areas or if they do get it for cheap because you’ll pay in chronic disease, stress etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People who are bothered by plane noise seriously bother me. Especially being that far out.
I walk/run by DCA several days a week - it's about 1.5 mile from my home on paths, and considerably shorter if you draw a direct line. It's white noise. And you physically FEEL takeoff and landing sometimes.
Not a big deal, but a tradeoff for living in the neighborhood we choose to live in.
If you're that abnormally sensitive, move elsewhere and don't complain about not having an airport you can get to easily.
The airport is 1.5 miles from your house?
Another poster who has never been to DC or NoVa.