PaulSecteur
No longer a Specialized fanboy
- Location
- Walsall, West Mids.
Hi,
My Dad has had his hearing aids for about 3 years, and hates them. He worked in a noisy factory all his life and also has a bit of tinnitus.
He say his hearing aids are OK for normal conversation and watching the TV, but if there is a high pitch noise - usually knives and forks on plates, plates being put on the draining board then these seem over-amplified and are really painful. I thought he was taking the P and using that as an excuse, but having tried them he is right.
Does anyone know if this is something all hearing aids do, or is it just the cheap ones (my dad wont go into detail about where or how much he paid). I suspect he just got the cheapest ones so he could tell my Mum he has got them, he hates fussing over this sort of thing - he was the same with glasses.
Is it possible to tune the hearing aids to amplify the sounds he needs, but not the ones he doesn't?
Thanks for any help.
Paul.
My Dad has had his hearing aids for about 3 years, and hates them. He worked in a noisy factory all his life and also has a bit of tinnitus.
He say his hearing aids are OK for normal conversation and watching the TV, but if there is a high pitch noise - usually knives and forks on plates, plates being put on the draining board then these seem over-amplified and are really painful. I thought he was taking the P and using that as an excuse, but having tried them he is right.
Does anyone know if this is something all hearing aids do, or is it just the cheap ones (my dad wont go into detail about where or how much he paid). I suspect he just got the cheapest ones so he could tell my Mum he has got them, he hates fussing over this sort of thing - he was the same with glasses.
Is it possible to tune the hearing aids to amplify the sounds he needs, but not the ones he doesn't?
Thanks for any help.
Paul.