garys_2k said:
True, if you situated your head in such a way that one side of your eardrum was in the atmosphere, and the other was in the hard vacuum, you'd have this incredible pressure.
However, as you move away, this level will drop by distance. AT this kind of level, nothing is going to be remotely linear, and you need an expert who deals with shock waves, etc, to cope, rather than a simple acoustician.
The size of the room around it also matters, it will determine the mid-time drop in pressure before the outside room equalizes. It will also put some PSI load (without more specifics than I have, or want) on those walls temporarily, might pull in a window or something there if it's not a great big space around it.
In general, I think it's more dangerous than people assume, and I again repeat my suggestion to get a real expert opinion.
Consider, if the room has 13.7 times the volume of the vacuum chamber, you'll have a temporary 1 PSI drop until the room leaks back up. 1 PSI is, lessee, um, 144 lbs/sq foot. (cough) That also works out to about 170db SPL, although probably at a low frequency, not at midband ear sensitivity... This port is 4"? I haven't figured out the Helmholtz resonance, but it's going to be low, you may get quite a few (low frequency) oscillations as it fills up, too...
GET AN EXPERT OPINION DUDE!