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Technology Widex

Listening to Music with Hearing Aids

By
on
April 11, 2021

 

I have an interest in high-fidelity sound reproduction. I usually listen to music through speakers, but with the passage of time, I noticed that my system did not sound as good as it used to. In particular, the treble seemed to have lost its sparkle. I had known for a long time that the hearing in my left ear was worse than that in my right, and a hearing test a few years ago confirmed this to be the case. It also revealed that I had age-related hearing loss in my right ear.

Mr. Robert Donnan, RJD Hearing Care

When I first got my Oticon Opn hearing aids, my audiologist, Mr. Robert Donnan, encouraged me to report my experience of wearing them. I tried listening to music with them in place. There was more treble, but an unpleasant artificial warble was added to high-frequency sounds which spoilt the listening experience. I discussed the issue with Mr. Donnan and he set up a Music program, but I still found the sound from the speakers to be better without the aids.

A couple of years later Mr. Donnan suggested that I should try a pair of Widex Beyond hearing aids. Widex claims that their aids give users a true-to-life musical listening experience.

 

 

Widex Beyond

I am reasonably happy with the sound from the speakers when listening to music with the Widex aids in place. I think that the fact that I use open ear tips helps because they allow the sound processed by the aids to be mixed with the direct sound.  Even so, I am aware that I am listening through hearing aids, rather than to the music itself.  The bass is OK, but the treble is a bit brittle and harsh.  Reducing the volume of the music program on the aids and increasing the volume of the speakers improves the sound, but there are times when it would be better if I could listen to music without the possibility of disturbing others.


I have been thinking about the use of headphones with, or instead of, hearing aids for a while.  

The frequency range of Hi-Fi headphones is generally of the order of 5-50,000Hz. There are those who consider a frequency range of that order to be ridiculous because the range of human hearing is only about 20-20,000Hz at the most. The extended range is considered to add nuance and timbre to the sound that we hear when listening to music through them. In other words, they sound better. This could be because the headphones that claim to have such a wide frequency range tend to be better engineered than those that do not.

What frequency range do Widex claim for their hearing aids? Probably 100-10,000Hz at the most. Hearing tests cover the range 250-8,000Hz because that is all that is considered to be necessary for hearing aids. A frequency range of 250-8,000Hz is more than enough for the understanding of speech but insufficient for good quality music reproduction. The quality of the sound of music played through hearing aids is compromised by the lack of frequency bandwidth of the devices.

The sound of music streamed to hearing aids is processed, presumably according to the wearer’s prescription. If a sound can only be heard through the aids, as it is with streamed music, the quality is compromised by the digital processing. Digital hearing aids are wonders of modern technology, but their miniaturisation limits what is possible, at least in their current state of development.

I had an idea about using over-the-ear headphones with the hearing aids in place, allowing the processed sound from the aids to be mixed with the unprocessed sound, as it is with speakers. I do not think that it would work, because I suspect that the arrangement would cause the aids to feedback, making music listening impossible.

I looked to see if I could find any headphones that had the facility to adjust the sound of the left and right sides independently, but I could not find any. Some dedicated headphone amplifiers might have this option.

There would seem to be a gap in the market for headphones designed to assist people with impaired hearing to be able to listen to high quality music reproduction as it was intended to be heard. In the absence of such devices, I will continue to listen to music through speakers with my Widex aids in place. I will use the hearing aid music program at reduced volume, to allow the processed sound from the aids to be mixed with the direct sound, to minimize the brittle and harsh treble sound that they produce.   

fhj   08/04/2021


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Consumer Opn Phonak

When considering which brand….

By
on
November 14, 2020

You can’t ignore how popular each brand is? 

As a very rough guide, we can look at the financials of each main company. In this case, latest revenue (shown in Euro).

There are really only 5 big players left – and they own two or more brands, and most also run…


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Consumer Resound

Resound One – not a great start

By
on
November 11, 2020

One of our senior testers remarked that this was just not comfy enough on the ear,  stating that ‘it felt like I had a hearing aid on’,  instead of his previous model which he could simply forget…


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Consumer Phonak

Phonak Paradise – Hearing aids got a bit smarter

By
on
November 11, 2020

Using Paradise and Voice Assistant.
Hearing aids are getting smarter!

Gary, a hearing aid user has an iPhone. Siri is switched on. He loves the new feature. With two quick taps to his ear (he has this down to a fine art), he can ask Siri whatever. He demonstrated the obvious…


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Audiology Consumer Widex

Widex Evoke Fusion 440

By
on
March 7, 2020

Regaining Classical Music

I suspect one of the fears that grips every classical music lover lying awake in the early hours of the morning is “What if I lost my hearing? How could I cope without music?”

Last August it happened. Thanks to a badly managed session of microsuction (nothing to…


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Marvel Technical

How to reset a jammed Phonak Marvel Rechargeable Hearing Aid

By
on
October 25, 2019

If your hearing aid has a solid green light when out of the charger:

hold the bottom of the button down for 15 seconds

place back in the charger for 2 seconds

take out -FIXED.

 

 

By R J Donnan


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Opn

Oticon Opn App – interesting!

By
on
August 24, 2019

Apparently, this chap has managed to defy time and relativity.
The aids were on for around 13 hours that day, but nevertheless:


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Marvel

London: Marvel no good

By
on
August 14, 2019

Phonak Marvel
2019-02-20
London

“As the set I have are meant to be top of the range, I’m very disappointed in:

a. The ability of the hearing aids to adapt to the surrounding noise – they can’t do that – they just make everything louder.

b. Bluetooth quality is appalling with both an iPhone…


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Marvel Netherlands

Netherlands: Phonak Marvel M90 vs. M50?

By
on
July 2, 2019
3/5

“Very good for normal hearing. Far better than my 5 year old Resound.”

“All is crisp and clear”

“I now have an M90, that promised to reduce echo. But in a large room, I did not hear any real improvement. If the curtains are closed, everything works fine, but if you open the curtains you hear the echo again. 
As a consequence (and see below) I will now try the far cheaper M50. Why pay for a feature that has no real effect?

Streaming with Bluetooth works fine. But the hands-free feature was a big disappointment. It only works in a quiet room. But in a car, outside, supermarket etc 80% of the time the phone calls fail, because the other party cannot understand me. Logical, because the microphones are hidden behind the ear, and to let others hear my voice I must start speaking very loudly. And that is a little embarrassing, and also not very respectful for the people that call you. The solution, to use the microphone of your phone is – according to Phonak – something that is theoretically not possible because of Bluetooth.”

Netherlands.

30.06.19

HEARING AID REVIEW
West Yorkshire

These hearing aid reviews has been compiled by me, Robert Donnan, with a little help from our 4 main contributors (who are all patients of mine). I’m an independent private ‘hearing aid dispenser’ (HCPC registered). Hopefully, we can help debunk some over-marketing of hearing aids, and give you, the potential hearing aid consumer a better insight into the hearing aid market.

Phonak Audeo Marvel

Unique Features: Interactive remote audiologist programming, Hands-free answering and ending of calls

Oticon Opn S 1

The superior quality ‘made for iPhone’ hearing aid.

Resound LiNX Quattro

Best remote control app. ‘Made for iPhone’ with remote audiologist programming app.