Hello, I’m new to this forum. I am an audio professional, but I have developed moderate normal age-related high frequency loss (I’m 72).
I would like to find hearing aids that I can fully program myself. I know what things should sound like. I have been running live sound all my life. I don’t want somebody who doesn’t know what I am hearing to tell me what things are supposed to sound like.
I got a pair of KZ-ZST cheap in-ear monitors a couple years ago. They have a strong boost in the high end, and when I listen to music through them it sounds pretty much normal to me, not like I have a pillow over my head when listening to live sound or conversation.
There seems to be a massive amount of obfuscation of the technical aspects of hearing aids. I finally stumbled upon Hearing Tracker, and now I’m overwhelmed trying to filter through all the information to glean the nuggets that might be the answers to my search.
It is incredible to me that a device that costs probably about $29 to manufacture can sell for $2000.
From what I gather, hearing aids mostly are designed to work in the speech range, about 200 to 7000 Hz or so. So this tells me that I need an open-dome type receiver-in-canal so that the bass in the room is not blocked, but the higher frequencies are just boosted to bring things up to a flat frequency response.
In any case, I want full access to the frequency response curve. And I don’t want compression, adaptive digital noise filtering, frequency shifting, or anything else that makes what I hear sound different than it is in real life.
I get the impression that “self-fitting” hearing aids are dumbed down so much that there is no access to the raw capabilities of the devices.
So I hope that someone here can help me cut through the nonsense so I can home in on hearing aids that will meet my needs.
Thanks in advance
John Dudeck