plasticdinosaur
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- Jan 12, 2011
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So I already asked one person this, and now I'm curious if anyone else can weigh in.
My hearing aids have thin tubes on them and full, soft ear molds. But the thing is, I HATE the thin tubes. They bend, and change color, and dig painfully into my ears. Plus I can't find the tubes mine has online, so I have no way to change them without an office visit. Uhg.
I've been having a lot of trouble with popping sounds, static, and just all around poor sound quality and feedback with these new hearing aids that I've never had with any before. And after reading that someone else has noticed an improvement in sound quality from switching from thin tubes to normal size tubes, I'm starting to wonder if this is the root of the problem. Does tube size really affect sound quality?
My hearing aids have thin tubes on them and full, soft ear molds. But the thing is, I HATE the thin tubes. They bend, and change color, and dig painfully into my ears. Plus I can't find the tubes mine has online, so I have no way to change them without an office visit. Uhg.
I've been having a lot of trouble with popping sounds, static, and just all around poor sound quality and feedback with these new hearing aids that I've never had with any before. And after reading that someone else has noticed an improvement in sound quality from switching from thin tubes to normal size tubes, I'm starting to wonder if this is the root of the problem. Does tube size really affect sound quality?