Hello Blake, I think that I'm looking for a hearing aid that would allow me to focus on the person opposite me, say, in a restaurant. Did you find that the option for the Lexie B2's does a good job of this? Is there any other hearing aid model that might be best at "focusing in front" and with damping down "background noise in retaurants"? Thanks so much. Love your reviews!
Hi Blake. I'm looking for an OTC hearing aid that I can program. I've done a hearing test and got the graph that shows where I'm missing out. These Lexie HA's only allow a very general treble/bass balance. I would like something more specific such as a builtin bluetooth compatible graphic equalizer. Is there such a product on the market? Thanks very much.
Sorry to hear this! The best option is to switch to a lager dome tip. Lexie comes with very small tips as default but there should be a bag of larger ones you can change to. Hope this helps!
Does Lexie B2 support fitting/tuning where the user's hearing is different in each ear? I see reference of a "Balance" button in the app, but nothing about being able to adjust where only high frequencies are different between ears.
@@HearSoundly Do models like Jabra Select 300 have that ability, given that they are able to program aids using audiograms? If so, that might be a better choice for me.
This product is best for mild to moderate hearing loss so no, not a good fit for profound loss. You can read our full guide to severe loss here www.soundly.com/blog/hearing-aids-severe-hearing-loss
To our knowledge there is not a masking program in these devices. The hearing aids themselves could provide some relief by amplifying world sounds but not a specific masking noise.
@@HearSoundly For the record, the B2+ (not sure of the others) has the ability to stream to your ear. You can use a program on your phone to play a masking noise, which will stream to the device.
Hello Blake, I think that I'm looking for a hearing aid that would allow me to focus on the person opposite me, say, in a restaurant. Did you find that the option for the Lexie B2's does a good job of this? Is there any other hearing aid model that might be best at "focusing in front" and with damping down "background noise in retaurants"? Thanks so much. Love your reviews!
Do they make whistling noises or make a humming sound ever when you wear them?
how much is FRONT row since i yawned rollssrf right
Hi Blake. I'm looking for an OTC hearing aid that I can program. I've done a hearing test and got the graph that shows where I'm missing out. These Lexie HA's only allow a very general treble/bass balance. I would like something more specific such as a builtin bluetooth compatible graphic equalizer. Is there such a product on the market? Thanks very much.
Somehow missed this comment. Apologies! Did you find a product?
I have the Lexie B2 hearing aids...my problem squealing... embarrassing and annoying what can I do? Thanks
Sorry to hear this! The best option is to switch to a lager dome tip. Lexie comes with very small tips as default but there should be a bag of larger ones you can change to. Hope this helps!
Does Lexie B2 support fitting/tuning where the user's hearing is different in each ear? I see reference of a "Balance" button in the app, but nothing about being able to adjust where only high frequencies are different between ears.
Great question! To my knowledge you can only adjust the volume per ear but the pitch is the same for both ears regardless.
@@HearSoundly Do models like Jabra Select 300 have that ability, given that they are able to program aids using audiograms? If so, that might be a better choice for me.
Is this fits for propound hearing loss?
This product is best for mild to moderate hearing loss so no, not a good fit for profound loss. You can read our full guide to severe loss here www.soundly.com/blog/hearing-aids-severe-hearing-loss
Thank you for the video
You bet!
Any iphone? Even the newest iphone 15 version?
Yep. The newest version should work!
Are there features to address, mask tinnitus
To our knowledge there is not a masking program in these devices. The hearing aids themselves could provide some relief by amplifying world sounds but not a specific masking noise.
@@HearSoundly For the record, the B2+ (not sure of the others) has the ability to stream to your ear. You can use a program on your phone to play a masking noise, which will stream to the device.
mannequin how much
Too bad most retirees cannot afford them on 1100 dollars a month