by photoSteveZ » Sun Oct 16, 2022 9:12 pm
Boatguy wrote: ↑Sun Oct 09, 2022 11:30 pm
photoSteveZ wrote: ↑Sat Oct 08, 2022 10:41 pm
I wore my hearing aids under the headset while I took the test (my hearing aids turn themselves off when they detect that I'm wearing a headset) and the high frequency boost curve that the Lightspeed app then programmed into the headset looks a lot like the one my hearing aids use.
Did you take the test in the plane, or on the ground? In his review, Max Trescott's did the test in quiet room, but it seemed to me I'd want o do the test in the plane, in flight to get a "real world" equalization curve".
In any case, is there a noticeable improvement in the sound quality versus the hearing aids?
The Lightspeed phone app suggests doing the test in a quiet room. In the plane you wouldn’t be able to hear their subtle test cues. When you’re done, the app plays a few bars of music with and without the equalization curve to give you a chance to hear what the equalization curve is doing for you.
Since my hearing aids turn off when they detect a headset, all I can really say is that the new Delta Zulus deliver good audio, with noticeably crisper voice reproduction, than either my other Zulus or my Bose A20s.
[quote=Boatguy post_id=93873 time=1665358219 user_id=2575]
[quote=photoSteveZ post_id=93853 time=1665268882 user_id=3423]
I wore my hearing aids under the headset while I took the test (my hearing aids turn themselves off when they detect that I'm wearing a headset) and the high frequency boost curve that the Lightspeed app then programmed into the headset looks a lot like the one my hearing aids use.[/quote]
Did you take the test in the plane, or on the ground? In his review, Max Trescott's did the test in quiet room, but it seemed to me I'd want o do the test in the plane, in flight to get a "real world" equalization curve".
In any case, is there a noticeable improvement in the sound quality versus the hearing aids?
[/quote]
The Lightspeed phone app suggests doing the test in a quiet room. In the plane you wouldn’t be able to hear their subtle test cues. When you’re done, the app plays a few bars of music with and without the equalization curve to give you a chance to hear what the equalization curve is doing for you.
Since my hearing aids turn off when they detect a headset, all I can really say is that the new Delta Zulus deliver good audio, with noticeably crisper voice reproduction, than either my other Zulus or my Bose A20s.