I well recall 1972 at a summer camp for 2 weeks, when a soccer field was laid out in a huge mowed grassy field, and the game rules were explained to us. After 30 minutes of what seemed to us like a lot of useless running around, the counselors gave up on trying to convince us it could be fun. Later in the week when I became involoved in "youthful disagreements" and strife,
a boxing ring (on the ground) was set up, where REAL sport could take place....you guys wanna disagree, here's your boxing gloves, here's the rules. Go at it. And it was a lot of fun and went on for several days.
To this day, I still prefer competing against myself for best when possible, but if I am to choose sports in order of appeal,
it would be windsurfing, surfing, drag racing, roller derby, then baseball and US football.
Every day ( and night ) I have only to look out the front window of the house to see soccer in the park across the street, and as my neighborhood looks like a UN convention, I accept this, but it still does nothing for me. I was in Mexico whatever year it was they won over Italy (or was it Argentina?) and I remember how all work stopped at the factory to watch the games.
Why is it that some nationalities think yelling (by players) during a match is acceptable, while others look down on this?
I know why I'd rather they not holler, but I'm wondering why those who don't yell all the time have this preference.
Is it considered low-class or what?
Back to the buzz, I tried some more, but it seems hard to filter because there is no phase reference...it's not one vuvuzela, but 10s of thousands, so an active filter can't find any particular "point" to reference.
A passive filter might work, if designed at into a low-impedance circuit, as in the speaker path, but gosh, what an amount of wire
on an air-core would be needed to cut that low!.... I've hand wound notches for 10 khz and 5 khz, but it would be quite a bit for these lower tones, and also would be needed one for each of the overtones.