Assistive Hearing Bluetooth Earbuds- Tuned for YOUR Ears
Assistive Hearing Bluetooth Earbuds- Tuned for YOUR Ears
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A hybrid between hearing aids and Bluetooth earbuds, the Wear and Hear Personalized Headset does what no other earbuds or hearing aids do.
They give you full access to what’s underneath the hood.
Allow me to explain. Other earbuds are tuned to a specific sound profile. An audio engineer chooses the frequency response that she thinks is best suited for the design and shape of the hardware and it’s either good enough for you or it isn’t. Some earbuds are tuned brighter, with emphasis on the mids and highs. Some earbuds are warmer, highlighting the lows. You have no control over that.
But What About EQs?
EQs are great, and they work well to help us fine tune the frequencies we want to hear. But you’re still anchored to the way your speaker drivers have been tuned. You aren’t changing any of the fundamentals.
The Wear and Hear Changes The Game
Look, I always love manufacturing my own products. I love working closely with the engineers and giving our product designs that extra dose of care and makes our DAK products unique.
But the guys at Wear and Hear did such a phenomenal job creating a fully adjustable headset (part earbuds part hearing aid) that I’d be remiss not to share it with you. It’s not because it’s a crossover between hearing aid and Bluetooth earbud (they’re not the first to do this). It’s that they take personalized sound to an entire new level.
Speaker Drivers Tuned for Specifically for Your Hearing
Well, they aren’t tuned for you when you take them out of the box. That’s the best part. You’ll be tuning them yourself using the free Wear and Hear app. This only needs to be done once. And once you’ve tuned the speaker drivers, you can use them with any device you want and they’ll be 100% tuned according to your listening profile. You never need the app again.
OK, Here’s how it works
Even though you can tune the drivers however you want, if you aren’t an audio engineer (I’m not), tuning your own speaker drivers won’t do you much good.
So, yes, the Wear and Hear does give you full access to tune how you choose. But thankfully, if you’re like me and need the help of a professional, the Wear and Hear app will walk you through a hearing test, assessing each ear individually and will create your sound profile for you. It sets both the earbud and the hearing aid according to compensate for any frequencies that you can’t hear well anymore.
About the Hearing Enhancement Function
Once the hearing assessment builds your listening profile, you can quickly switch between four diverse listening environment presets from a button on the headset.
That’s to say, hearing aids need to be adjusted in different environments, and the Wear and Hear accounts for that. Choose between the following presets:
-Indoor
-Outdoor
-Crowd
-Live Music
Personally, I love these just for the personalized music profile I’ve built. But the Reviews below give you an idea about the hearing enhancements and how effective they are by others who do need it.
Try them Risk-Free for 30 days. If you don’t love the way they improve your quality of life, send them back for a courteous full refund.
Specifications
Bluetooth
- Version 4.2, Class II
- HFP 1.6, HSP 1.2, A2DP
- Supported audio CODECs: SBC, aptX, aptX-LL
- Range: 10m
Acoustic Performance
- Maximal Sound Pressure Level (OSPL90), HFA: 116 dB SPL
- Full-on Gain, HFA: 42 dB
- Total Harmonic Distortion (THD): < 0.7%
- Receiver Specifications
- Speaker: 13.6 mm receivers
- Frequency Response: 20 Hz to 20 kHz
- Microphone Specifications
- Microphones (four in total):
- Ultra low-noise 74 dB SNR ECM (Electret Condenser Microphone) in each earpiece
- Low-noise digital 64 dB SNR MEMS in each control box
- Frequency Response: 100 Hz to 15 kHz
- Microphones (four in total):
Battery
- Rechargeable single cell Lithium Ion
- Charging interface: Micro-USB
- Capacity: 250mAh
Software Versions Supported by W&H BeHear App
- Android: Version 4.4 and up
- iOS: Version 9 and up
Operation Time
- Hearing mode: 12+ hours
- Talk: 10+ hours
- Play: 8+ hours
- Standby: 400 hours
Mechanical Specifications
- Headset Weight: 29 g (1.0 oz.)
- Wearing Style: Neck loop (behind the neck)
Vibration Alerts
(enabled/disabled using the BeHear NOW smartphone application, Settings menu):
- Power On/Off
- Bluetooth Pairing
- Bluetooth Connection/Disconnection
- Connecting to Charger
- Incoming Call (synchronized with call tone)
I bought these for my step father who has severe hearing loss due. Once we tuned them on the app his hearing is better than it's been in nearly 30 years. He does recommend using the included wind covers at all times as they helped remove any remaining tinniness that was not handled by tuning.
- Amazon Customer
First a little background on me.
For about 40 years I have been a professional live
sound and studio recording engineer, so I know technology and sound.
But over the years I have lost a substantial amount of my hearing. I can't do live sound
anymore, and in the studio all I can do is be a consultant and teach technology and
sound concepts.
I have used a number of hearing aids, and have been extremely disappointed with
them and the insane pricing.
I have a number of different hearing assist devices, some work for some settings,
and some work for others, but none give the versatility and control I want and require.
So, I have been on the search for a better way. Most importantly I want to have
complete control of my devices so I can change things as I need, for all the different
setting I encounter on a day to day basis.
I also used to be a sign language interpreter, and worked with the deaf and hard of
hearing. I'm hoping this device can help some of my friends.
(Now, I'm hard of hearing. Come on folks, please use hearing protection. Nowdays
the technology can create even more dangerous levels of sound, and the technology
of hearing protection devices are incredible).
I ran across this BeHear Now device from the Wear & Hear company and Alango
Technologies on Amazon, and decided to look into it.
It seemed to be exactly what I was looking for. So I did some research, compared
other devices, watched all of the teaching videos, looking for that elusive control
I had been searching for that hearing aids lack, and are just now starting to impliment
because of competition with devices like this, but the hearing aids are still way
overpriced and don't have the complete control that this device does.
I have been in communication with the techs and customer service asking
questions trying to get an idea if this really is going to work for me, (or my hard of
hearing friends).
Now I have one. First, I want to state, I am still in the process of evaluating this
device. I have not been payed to evaluate this device. I payed full price. I evaluate all
technology I encounter in the studio and on the road, very thoroughly, realistically,
and with an open mind.
I have been really putting this device through the paces.
So far, it is doing great. Seems to do what I had been hoping for.
Now on to the review, here is what I think so far;
1 - Love the full control, especially the EQ (called Home page) where I can tune the
frequencies in real time, (this was probably the one most important thing I was
looking for). I love being able to save my settings.
2 - The different modes, Indoor, Outdoor, Crowd, and Live Music, are in my opinion
very discernable and seem to work quite effectively.
3 - The noise reduction seems very robust, and works well. I have read where some
people are confusing it with noise cancelation, it only changes the background
noise frequencies, and works quite well. It is not noise cancelation, it is reduction
for existing background noise.
4 - I did both the Basic and Advanced evaluation (similar to the evaluation a hearing
audiologist conducts). Seems pretty spot on with my audiology chart from my
Doctor. I like the fact that I can fine tune the evaluation to better suit my needs
and can be changed as I see fit, then save the settings.
5 - I like that you can have complete control with the phone, save the settings and
disconnect from the phone and all the new setting are in the device, so you can be
completely separated from the phone and it still has almost all functions with the
collar switches. Oh, by the way I was also able to use it with my tablet. I don't think
it works with all tablets, but it did with mine
6 - I was surprised by the quality of bluetooth streaming music from my phone.
The earpieces are quite good, not as high as some high end BT devices,
but I found them to be better than I was expecting. I found that trying the different
silicone domes have a big effect on the quality, especially the bass. So I am able
to enjoy music with decent quality. I have a generic BT transmitter that I use on
my TV, and I am pleased with the earpiece quality as well with very little
latency (latency is the delay between the sound and the picture).
Here is an experience I had a couple of days ago while wearing the device.
I was in the car visiting with my wife, and I noticed her voice was very processed
sounding, which as a sound engineer I know exactly what is going on, the device
is processing the algorithms. But... I could 'HEAR' her, and the background sounds
wind, tiresound, engine, etc were dramatically reduced. Again, I will restate, I could
'HEAR' her, even though she sounded like her voice was going through an effects box.
No other device I have used, has worked this well in being able to seperate the voice
from other sounds and make out what another person is clearly saying, just her voice
sounded strange, but thats ok, I could clearly hear what she was saying.
(algorithms are the mathmatical programming information the device needs to
process to effectively get a very good sound)
I read in some of the reviews people were confused by this effect.
This is something that absolutly needs to be made known in the sales information.
With that, I think if customers were aware that this is normal with current technology,
they would be more excepting of this.
Here is another experience I had a couple of days ago.
My wife and I were sitting on the porch, and again I was having difficulty hearing
her. We live very close to a highway and it's quite noisy. I have noticed since my
hearing has gotten bad, the cars with tire sounds on the pavement, really drowns out
conversation. I turned on the device. I found that the Crowd Mode with High noise
reduction worked better in this situation than the Outside mode.
This is what is fun about experimenting to see what works best for a given situation.
This is done in all studios, experimenting for the best sound.
Again, I could hear my wife, I still hear some road noise, but man, what an
improvement in our conversation.
There is one thing I have noticed that I would suggest changing, just a little.
The limiter compressor function is a bit too aggresive. In the studio, if our limiters
or compessors are set too high, it is what we call sound pumping, when louder
sounds happen, it clamps down the volume, and it can be distracting. This function
is 'absolutely' necessary and something a lot of other devices don't have. This is really handy
for loud sounds, (drop something on the floor) so as to not uncomfortably overdrive
the volume, but I think this should be a bit milder.
(I have been in communication with the company and they said they noticed that also,
and are going to change so the limiting is milder). (Thanks guys).
Oh, one more thing, when I am bluetooth streaming, music, TV, etc, and I turn
on Listen-thru mode, the 'quality' of the outside sounds are reduced compared to
the stand alone Hearing Assist mode. When I stop streaming, and go back to stand
alone Hearing Assist mode, the quality of the outside sounds are very good again.
I don't know if this is something that can be improved or not.
(again I have been in communication with the company and they said they are
planning some changes to that as well). (Thanks again guys).
These folks seem like they are going to really try to make this an outstanding
device. If they do, and they seem to be open to input, and with the reasonable
pricing, this device could possibly someday be a benchmark for all other similar
devices on the market to follow.
I don't want people to believe that this is going to give you back perfect hearing,
it is not. Nothing can do that. So a person has to be careful to not get false
expectations. So far it has made a huge improvement for me. I probably will never
wear my hearing aids again. This is so much easier to put on (wear), control,
and tune and is rechargable. I think I might get another one for backup, so I always
have one on the ready, using one while the other is charging.
I have to say this is a device that can dramatically improve what we have
unfortunately lost. And with a little bit of learning and patience, I think it is easy
enough for almost anyone to use.
So thus far I am quite pleased, but I really want to give it some more time, trying it
in all different settings. I am anxious to try it it in a restaurant setting, windy settings,
with live music, outside to hear birds (which I have not heard in a while), picking up
phone calls, and some other things I personally need.
I will post more later, after I have more experience with it.
- Ronald B.


