HearSource Self-Programmable Aids, A SCAM

If you want to drive to San Jose, we have two Costco’s that I know of with really good HA specialists; one is at the Senter Rd store and the other is at the Coleman Rd store. It’s pretty easy to get into the Senter Rd store, but it takes about a month or more to get into the Coleman Rd location. The word about this guy has gotten out. I know someone with a loss similar to yours and he has gotten his HA’s at Costco for at least the last 10 years. However, I would think you would be a good candidate for the Phonak Naida’s. I know someone who wears them and I think he got them for about $4,000 but I’m not sure were he got them.

Thanks for the tip. It may be worth a drive up, but my experience would be many drives up for the tweaking. As for Naidas, I was fitted with them when they first came out. If you remember, they were supposed to be waterproof. Well I wore them during the trial period while hiking in the fog. Conked out like they all do. I returned them and complained to the company. They replied that the problem was in the “earhook” and they would send my audi a replacement. Never showed up. Just another bait and switch. The 6500$ AGX BTE my audi wanted to sell me also was supposed to be water-proof. I looked at it closely. No screws or seams on the side. I asked my audi how it could possibly be repaired. He just shrugged. I suspect it is just replaced. Cheaper than repair. Maybe that is what will develop: throw-away rather than repair. Goes against my grain, but so does importing everything just about from China. That’s politics i guess. Thanks again for the tip. I am off to the mountains in a couple of days so i won’t be able to continue this thread much longer. It is a great helpful forum. Glad I joined. And thankful for the many helpful suggestions.

For hearing aids that fit your loss, America Hears wants $1999 per aid, which includes a custom mold. I would not ever spend that kind of money with them, even as good as my experience was with the company.

Yes, I’ve been wearing Freedom Powers for about 7 years. There are no issues with self programming. The software has a ‘wizard’ style option where you can answer a bunch of questions about performance (e.g… dishes in the sink are too loud) and let it change the gains, or you can go right in and tune the gains of the instrument yourself directly.

The instruments use a ADRO, a different type of compression, I happen to like it a lot. It also makes tuning it a lot easier as you don’t really have compression knees to deal with. If you’re thinking of going this route, read up on it.

The only issue I have with these instruments is durability. I’ve owned mostly Siemens over 25 years and they would require repair only rarely (5+ years). The AH instruments rarely go 2 year without a repair. Almost always the mics, on my instrument both the mics point mostly up. I’m sure they may great water basins. They offer flat $175 repairs, which is cheap these days, but it’s frustrating to have to use it so often. Repairs are usually completed and back in your hand within 5 business days.

RE America Hears Aids- Seven years of use is impressive for digitals-my experience has been only about 3 years. Repair cost that my audi wanted to charge was 500 bucks for a Starkey aid that went dead after only 2 years. America Hears has mixed reviews, but frequent repairs is mentioned a lot. I cannot see what they currently charge for a repair. For my loss, AH aids are pricey up front at 2000$ per aid. Maybe only 1000$ less than what my audi would charge for the lowest priced aids in the shop. AH is really my only self-programming option now other than buying an Icube from China on ebay along with Phonaks there too. Not sure that would save me much. Also,not sure I can handle all that technology. Some people on these forums are obviously into technology, but I am not really a computer geek. I am stone deaf without hearing aids but balk at 4 to 6 grand for them. Of course I would pay that if they worked well and lasted 7 years like yours. But that has not been my experience for the last 10 years since the industry went digital and since I got so deaf. For now I am thinking forget good clean hearing and buy some cheaper and more powerful analogs. There is a guy on ebay that sells reconditioned old superpower analogs for about $250 each. Maybe I will go with him. A lot less to lose. My history of hearing aid scams and disappointments suggests possibly a cochlear, but that was rejected by my insurance 6 months ago. This disability has been just an endless cycle of cost both time and money-and woe.

Send the Starkey’s that died after 2 years to www.DIRECTHEARINGAIDSERVICES.com in Garden Grove, CA and for way less than $500 they will have them working like new and back to you in usually less than a week. These guys all worked for Starkey until Starkey moved to Minn. about 8 years ago. You can call them at !-888-580-4327 and get a quote on the repairs. Hope this helps. Good luck!

Thanks for the Tip! I will send them the next repair.

Geesh, $500 for a repair? That’s twice what I charge, and we give a one year warranty. I’d check around to find a more reasonable price in your area.

George,
When you send them in put the HA’s in a pill bottle with cotton or tissue to pad it and send them of in the small flat rate box. I asked Tom if I should insure it and he said in all the years he’s been doing HA repairs not one has been lost and the flat rate has a tracking number, so you know were it is or has been.

My first post … just joined the forum. Thanks for posting this. In the past 10 years I’ve spent about $8k on HAs. First, 2 pairs of ReSounds at $3800/pair, then for the past two years I’ve been using archer’s-ear-type all-band amplifiers. The all-bands just don’t do it so I’ve decided to go DIY and have been researching that for the past week or so. Decent HAs are so expensive that I even thought about just building a set myself (retired elec engineer), but I’m trying to find a reasonably-priced alternative first. My wife has only so much patience for the geek-look and she’s afraid that, if I build it, I’ll end up having to use a back pack to carry my HA circuit boards. :slight_smile:

So, to my point, I’ve been reading about the HearSource aids and the eMiniTec home-programmer that comes with them looked intriguing. Looks like you’ve saved me some time, money and frustration with your post, so thank-you.

As I continue my research I’m sure I’ll be posting some comments/questions. Really glad that this forum exists.

When I first tried Hear-Source they offered a power aid. I tried to purchase it but they said it was not ready for the market, but they could boost the power on the other model to fit my loss. I went for it. I got a big package in the mail containing a binder with directions on how to self-program, along with the aids and some other trinkets (dessicant jar etc). The aids they sent did not work with my profound loss. I tried boosting the gain according to their instructions, but that did not work. I asked for a refund and they really spent months dragging their feet on that. I had to threaten them with legal action. They sent the money back less a 250$ trial fee. All a big scam. Today I see on their website that they only offer two lower-power BTE models. Maybe they would work for you, it all depends on your audiogram (you should post it). I had better luck with America Hears, and they let me try aids without any fees whatsoever. But even their aids were not quite powerful enough for my loss. My audi fitted me with very powerful Starkey aids about a year ago. They sort of do the job, but there is still a lot of loss. I cannot use the phone at all or hear the TV. So it goes. I still would avoid HearSource and recommend you try America Hears. Good Luck.

Thanks. I don’t have a recent graph from an audiologist, but I self-tested on myHearingTest dot net, and will post that below. It looks about right but I’ll be going to Costco soon and get a legitimate graph. I can use a telephone ok but I have to use captions on tv, otherwise it mostly sounds like they’re mumbling. Can’t hear high freq (beeps, birds, insects) but do “ok” with base tones. With the all-band amplifiers I still have problem with discriminating words, especially in the car, restaurants, etc. With no amplification, under normal household conditions, I can have somewhat of a conversation but the other person has to be facing me and I still have to ask for occasional repeats. Gets a bit frustrating for the wife at times.

Here’s my self-test graph:
Hz…Left…Right
250…30…13
500…30…20
1K…40…40
2k…60…60
4k…60…70
8k…70…70

I’ve looked on ebay and I can get a Hi-Pro USB programmer for around $210, including shipping. It’s said to be the “newer” model, but not the Hi-Pro 2. Also, looked on Alibaba and can get ReSound MA2T70-V Digital BTE aids for $100 each with minimum purchase of 10 units. I haven’t researched those yet to know whether they would be sufficient and I still need to get a legit audio to know exactly what my needs are, but it looks like I should be able to find something to work without spending thousands of dollars for a single pair, that won’t last more than 2 or 3 years. I’m now retired, living on set income, but worked as an elec engineer with over 20 years in microprocessor design, so I have a hard time paying $2000+ for an electronic unit that I know doesn’t cost more than about $30 to manufacture. I had to pay thousands for my own education and I don’t want to pay for the audiologist’s phd, business overhead and boat payment. I think I just have to do the research but, I’ve got the time to do it. :slight_smile:

ETA: Thanks for the tip about America Hears. I’ll contact them once I have an audio. I wish the online HA suppliers would list their ballpark pricing on their sites. I’m also looking for other online sources and prefer those with non-proprietary programmers that would work with the Hi Pro. It seems to be the industry standard. Gonna take some time and effort.

You are looking at old junk and setting yourself up for failure.</snip></snip></snip>

Here’s my self-test graph:
Hz…Left…Right
250…30…13
500…30…20
1K…40…40
2k…60…60
4k…60…70
8k…70…70

I don’t know how accurate the self-test would be. Maybe OK for moderate hearing loss. But I am so deaf that I cannot trust self-testing. As for do it yourself programming, you might want to check out the specific Forum for DIY people on this site, located at the very bottom of the list of Forums.
Of course anyone with hearing loss that needs to get hearing aids is going to get a shock at the cost of getting properly fitted by a professional. I had the same feeling about this as you have: Why pay someone a lot of money who tweaks a computer and asks me “how does that sound” when I can do that better for myself? Well I am not an electrical engineer like you, but I think even if you get the cables and hardware to wire your hearing aids to the computer, you still need a program that will work with those aids. Those programs are proprietary and made available only to the professionals. I guess there are programs available online that might work for some hearing aids, but all that is beyond me. Good Luck!

You don’t need to self test. Many places do that free. Costco does. Just make sure of the fee up front. Be prepared to fight with some to get a copy of your audiogram after the test.

And learn how to click a link. Hint…for example>> Free-Fitting-Software << in the links below.

HearSource hearing aid wearer for 3 years. I am very happy with them. I have never had ANY problems. I sent in two Beltone aids years ago for repair when my local dealer said they could not be repaired. Hear source repaired them and I had them back in a few days. Repair charge for both aids was about $200 together. Bought current aids from them in 2013. No problems and I am very happy. I like the self adjustments I can do. They were very eager to assist me while i was becoming acquainted with the software. Id totally recommend them anyone who is interested in the self adjusting of their own hearing aids.

I need Kirkland Signature fitting software and Miracle Ear software. They’re the only two I don’t have. If I had those two I might actually be able to help all those poor people.

The problem with self programming is that you can’t measure your improvement. You are only measuring comfort, not effectiveness. Its like all these people who say, “My hearing aids work great. They sound great… What was that?”

Now don’t get me wrong, it may give you a nice big warm fuzzy to think that because you don’t have to try and describe your issues to your AuD, that you are able to make accurate adjustments. But more often than not, every time you make an adjustment to improve sound comfort, you are sacrificing long term benefit. Which might be ok to you. But I’ve never had anybody come into my office and say, “I want to buy a really comfortable gadget to hang on my ear, but its not that important if it actually corrects my hearing loss.”

HearSource hearing aids are manufactured by Siemens. These devices have been licensed to many different companies over the years. Not saying thats bad. Just saying it is what it is. Statistically, about 1 out of 3 people who try them are really satisfied with them. If you are one of those 3 people, great.

I’m using the Widex software to update my sensogram occasionally with a HA in ear based hearing test. I only make small adjustments based on frequencies that tend to feedback too much (even with feedback suppression measures turned on) but otherwise I trust the HAs to work well according to my regularly and accurately measured hearing loss. Rather than adjust for comfort I just make sure the sensogram is accurate to my loss and then find the manufacture suggested programs that sound the best to me. I figure they’ve dumped tons of research and tech into these little things so I might as well trust their intended design and use. I’m pretty tech inclined and I like to spend a lot of time getting things perfect so it’s been nice doing so with my HAs without having to bug an Audiologist to spend hours with me :slight_smile:

Do you have Medicare advantage health insurance plan? Thru my healthcare provider which will start a program with TrueHearing and get discounted hearing aids. If you don’t have health insurance, you can purchase a Phonak Naida Marvel 70 aid for 1,595 dollars each. Retail is 2,650 dollars thru HearUSA. Truhearing has advanced and premium hearing aids at cheaper prices. Google TrueHearing. Under my healthcare provider benefits of coverage for next year, l can buy a premium hearing aid for 699 dollars copay.