Yeah this is quite scary to think about, I hadn’t thought much about that, but if underage kids could buy these, or as you say heaven forbid, that their parents could buy them and do this, is pointing to having to have some kind of compliance before buying (age restriction, audiogram etc) which defeats the purpose of OTC hearing aids in the first place.
I wonder if this is the reason why you can only buy them in certain states at the moment?
Serious. I have major anxiety that I am at the point of not being able to hear well enough to function in a business / office environment. I can’t hear on a standard office telephone. (Android cell phones work really well for me with or with HA) I witched from being a project manager to an estimator because I couldn’t hear well enough to work with customers. Estimating is pretty much a solo endeavor. In fact the Bose online test result was that my hearing damage was too severe for their product and recommended that I not buy them. I think they are being very careful about overstating the range and quality of their product. Day 4 and I’ve had a wide range of experiences now and they’ve best excellent.
My hearing loss is serious as well, and the Bose test also flagged my hearing loss as too severe. But while I haven’t tried their hearing aids, I have a pair of their Hearphones (now discontinued), and in a lot of situations, I find them better than my expensive, and fitted, hearing aids. They’re amazingly good in noisy situations, because of the active noise cancellation. I can imagine that their hearing aids would work better for me a lot of the time than my current ones do.
Your take on the Hearphones is something that I heard over and over and influenced my decision. The other reason is part of why I have such bad hearing damage. I played drums in bands for 40 years and systematically destroyed my hearing. Part of the process was that 20 years ago, my band played at the Bose corporate Christmas party. They had new products and prototypes all over the place on display and I thought, these people are a bunch of mad scientists. I just felt like if they brought a product to market, it would be good. In my opinion it is.
At the end of day 3 and I’m still impressed. For the past two years I make my morning oats in an Instant pot, and the past two mornings were the first time I ever heard the timer go off. Out shopping I wasn’t afraid to interact with people. Makes me feel more like I’m part of the world again.
I ordered this just to try them and see if they made any difference, so far they have made a real and tangible difference.
About a month ago I set up an appointment at Costco (3 hour round trip) and the appointment is June 8th. I plan to make the appointment, and see what they offer. The extra $550 is no small thing to me (we are fixed income SS) and I don’t care about streaming or rechargeable batteries. I just want to hear better.
But you did have to enter this information when you first got them right? Or did you just enter something random. I think most of us are really curious now.
Not from my brief research, no. Side note: I think shills are much rarer in the wild than people believe. I probably wouldn’t get the Bose at its current price, but it’s the first example of a new paradigm. I’m interested.
Edit: I wouldn’t be surprised if the reason Bose didn’t include streaming is that there’s no way they could make music sound really good with that form. They didn’t want to harm their brand.
I had an Audiogram done 4 years ago and bought Cellion 5 hearing aids based on that. I’m sure if I go tearing through all my old papers I could find it. I’m not going to do that because I don’t need to and I don’t need to prove anything to anyone. Bose has a test on their website which gives you a result yes or no. My result was no but I bought them anyway. You don’t have to enter any information. You do the test and you buy them try them and if they don’t work you send them back.
I do have a new agenda…try to never go to an audiologist ever again, try to never buy another pair of hearing aids from the established manufacturers, spend the least amount possible, and share my experiences, good or bad with as many hearing impaired people as possible. If they suck, I’ll be the 1st to tell you.
Hi Fig, Your post makes me very happy. I’m 64 and plan to be working for another 5 years. Not hearing makes me withdraw and at this age withdrawing leads to resigning myself to being an old man. I’m not ready to give in. I just had a total knee replacement and I build stuff, ride a badass sport motorcycle and out work most of my coworkers. Yet, I know what it’s like to have to be careful with money or even do without. My experience and feelings are the same as yours. I think that doing your due diligence with Costco is an excellent idea. I have a brand new pair of Signia Cellion 7 aids that are my backup. I just want to hear better too.
Exactly my experience. I have worn HAs for more than 20 years and always tried to find the “best” premium aids. When I went to a Bose store they tested me and said my loss was too great for the Hearphones. But, I got them anyway and found them to be much better than any aids I had for almost every situation. And, the tuning through the app was great. But, I hated the form factor and thought they looked goofy.
When the Phonak M90RT cam out I got them and I find them to be at least as good as the Hearphones and they look better. So---------
I am a musician and audiophile. I never did like the sound from Bose headphones - I am a big Sennheiser fan. I am looking forward to the collaboration.
Sure no problem, you don’t have to prove anything, but for other forum members thinking of buying these it would be helpful.
But for me anyway, I just don’t get how the Bose can just “work” for anyone’s particular hearing loss,as in without knowing exactly what frequencies you are missing, as in to know which ones to correct, this is where your audiogram comes in.
I took the online test as well, it’s hard to say exactly what tones/ frequencies they are checking by just speaking out some random numbers?
It does perform a self fitting routine which will obviously reflect your hearing loss which kinda is your approximate audiogram. I mean right now for HAs we do audiogram then fitting. They do more of a test and fit in place. For mild hearing loss that is that may be sufficient, and perhaps for moderate hearing that’s not complicated. I do not think it will ever help those with complicated hearing loss and audiograms, but it’s not designed for that. The principle of digital self fitting is becoming achievable with all the design enhancements that have developed over the last several years.
I hope the same from the Sennheiser products once they launch. If they perform well and maybe (fingers crossed) they can provide a good musical experience I’ll get them to try despite already having aids (yes I’m a fanboy of their audio headphones).
Eskie, Yours is a common sense point of view. Be open minded and see the possibilities. I honestly don’t really know how they adjust. The Bose app on the phone looks way too simple to me. I have Signia’s Audiologists software for programing hearing aids. With Bose there’s actually not much to adjust. My hearing loss is severe but the bottom line is that they just work. I’m also interested in seeing Sennheiser’s product as well as all the others that will come. Maybe hearing aids are not as complicated as the manufacturers would have you believe. If that were the case than maybe it’d be difficult to justify $6000 HA. Just a thought.
I think they’re still complicated, but maybe it doesn’t require $6K to take full advantage. Let’s face it. For many of the HAs out there, from basic to premium are usually the same chip but with different features enabled.
I don’t know where the insides of the Bose aids fall in comparison to Rx aids. The self fitting is an additional feature not found on big 5 aids. How complicated? No idea.
Still, items like these may, and hopefully will, drive down those $6K aids to something closer people can afford.
Audiologists still offer valuable services. If the hardware were lower and they decreased their fitting costs a bit, they will be competitive. Some users with severe hearing loss will always require a good Aud, and others may come in who normally wouldn’t, seeing prices becoming more palatable. There’s still a huge untapped market in the US. There can be enough work for everyone to benefit, including the individualized care from a professional Aud And that includes the manufacturers. If you move more volume you can reduce your margins and still make money. They’re already doing it at Costco.