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πŸ“’ Noise from Specific Sources/Low-Frequency Bass Limits

Low-Frequency Bass Limits: Chicago vs Orland Park

How do low-frequency bass limits rules compare between Chicago, IL and Orland Park, IL?

Chicago and Orland Park have similar restriction levels.

Chicago, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Chicago measures low-frequency bass at 55 dBC inside neighboring residences after MCC 11-4-1115 was updated to capture sub-bass that travels through walls. C-weighted readings allow inspectors to cite venues whose sound passes A-weighted limits.

View full Chicago rules β†’

Orland Park, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Cook County Chapter 38 environmental control rules and Illinois Pollution Control Board Part 901 set octave-band sound limits that capture low-frequency bass through 31 Hz and 63 Hz bands. dB(C) measurements supplement dB(A) when complaints describe rumble or thumping bass.

View full Orland Park rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactChicagoOrland Park
CodeMCC 11-4-1115-
Interior limit55 dBC inside neighbor-
Exterior limit55 dBA property line-
First fine$600-
Max fine$10,000 repeat-
State framework-IPCB Part 901 octave bands
Low-freq bands-31.5, 63, 125 Hz
Measurement-dB(C) plus octave bands
Indicator-dB(C)–dB(A) > 10 dB
Enforcer-Cook DEC and IEPA

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Chicago FAQ

What is dBC and why does Chicago measure it?

C-weighting captures low-frequency bass that A-weighting filters out. Chicago added the dBC limit because nightclub bass often passes A-weighted tests yet still rattles neighbors' walls and windows.

Can a bar lose its liquor license for bass complaints?

Yes. Repeated MCC 11-4-1115 citations create grounds for license review under MCC 4-60-140 nuisance and disorderly premises rules, especially after Police Department complaint logs.

Orland Park FAQ

Why does my neighbor's bass shake the windows but barely register on a dB meter?

Most consumer apps measure A-weighting, which deemphasizes low frequencies. Use C-weighting or a 31.5 Hz octave band measurement, which is what Cook County and IEPA inspectors rely on for bass complaints under IPCB Part 901.

Do Cook County rules apply to residential subwoofers?

Yes. IPCB Part 901 octave-band limits apply at any residential receiving land property line regardless of source. A subwoofer audible across the property line during nighttime hours likely violates 31.5 Hz and 63 Hz nighttime limits.

What's the difference between dB(A) and dB(C)?

dB(A) approximates human hearing sensitivity and undercounts bass; dB(C) is nearly flat and captures low-frequency energy. Inspectors compare both readings to confirm low-frequency dominance before issuing a Cook County Chapter 38 citation.

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