[Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-29 Thread Doug Renwick
I have just ordered a pair of Kirkland hearing aids from Costco and I have
two questions:
1. Are these behind the ear aids susceptible to high levels of RFI?
2. Kirkland/Costco offer two different sizes of behind the ear, a smaller
one using type 312 batteries with a life of 4-5 days or a slightly larger
one using a type13 battery with a life around 10 days.
Both batteries are really cheap at $11.99 for 48.
What has been people's experience?

Doug

"The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits."
Albert Einstein 




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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-29 Thread Eric Swartz - WA6HHQ, Elecraft
Folks - Let's close this thread now as it has drifted more OT and is also 
exceeding the 'soft' 10 post OT posting limit limit.


Eric
Mooderator
/elecraft.com/

On 3/28/2019 7:07 AM, KE8G wrote:

Yep, Costco for hearing aids is the best.  My wife has had them for years,
and we are going there today for "tune up".  Always great service, and with
our back and forth to Texas, we always have a Costco for follow up, if
needed.

73 de Jim - KE8G



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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-29 Thread Ignacy
I used to have a dual channel 15-band equalizer. It could quickly compensate
for deficiencies in my ear and  signals. Compared to software equalizers,
you can manipulate them rapidly for max readability. Many times a difficult
copy became an easy copy.

However, the equalizer was susceptible to RFI, had some background noise and
it took lots of space. Now I use RX EQ in K3. Good but not as good as the
manual equalizer. 

Ignacy, NO9E



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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-29 Thread Charlie T
I'll second the Costco recommendation.

That said, their resident audiologist told me flat out, even the best will
not make your ears suddenly 16 years old again.
They can do wonders, but don't expect them to be perfect.

He has tweaked mine a couple times over the years for minor improvements and
I have to choose their program (blue-tooth link to phone)  depending on my
environment, home, in a crowd,  listening to music, etc.

I will say that they make a yuge difference and offer some advice to you
"younger" guystake care of your ears.
If you're running a chain saw or a lawn mower (or playing lead guitar in a
metal band), WEAR EAR PROTECTION.

For years, I didn't and I am now paying the price.
(Well, maybe not the metal band part...but as they used to say, "If the
music's too loud, you're too old", which is NOT the best advice for your
ears.)

73, Charlie k3ICH








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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Robert G Strickland via Elecraft
A friend who was slowly going blind commented: "Blindness cuts you off 
from things; deafness cuts you off from people." For most folks most of 
the time, deafness is gradual and therefore unnoticed - for the most 
part. The world slowly becomes more distant, the deafening person more 
isolated. Don't let this happen! Seconds and thirds to those earlier in 
this thread who said much the same thing(s).

...robert

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rc...@verizon.net.usa
Syracuse, New York, USA
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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Gary Smith
Costco. I bought their new Phonak at a 
true savings. Their Kirkland brand are 
fantastic too. Free replacement if lost 
for the first 2 years...

73,

Gary
KA1J

> On 3/27/2019 6:28 PM, Gwen Patton wrote:
> > Maybe an audiologist can help me with it, and I'm glad
> > someone popped up with the idea, because it had never occurred to me
> > that there WERE audiologists (of course there are, why wouldn't
> > there be?) until I read this post.
> 
> Yes, you should. But watch your wallet when he/she tries to sell you
> the hearing aids that pay her/him a BIG commission.
> 
> 73, Jim K9YC
> 
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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Mark Petiford via Elecraft
 Re. Gwen, NG3P comment:  I should probably see an audiologist someday. I've 
had nasty tinnitus as
long as I can remember.

Yes, you should...no, you MUST!  It is amazing how much hearing deficiencies 
affect us and we don't even know it.  I am not a doctor or audiologist, but I 
suspect that if you have tinnitus, you probably have some hearing loss.


 There are lots of good instruments (hearing aids) on the market today spread 
over a wide price range.  I have tried many of them (including Kirkland brand 
from Costco), and they all differ somewhat, but have one thing in common.  They 
are only as good as the audiologist who adjusts them (in my case the Costco 
audiologist was not very good), and your willingness to allow your brain to 
accept them (your brain must learn to use them).  If either of these are 
factors are not there, you are wasting your money, and you will continue to 
suffer.  You may not realize you are suffering, but everyone around you will.

Do not expect immediate results.  You may hate them initially.  You can hear 
yourself talk...and breathe!  Wear them anyway, all day long when possible.  Do 
not expect things to be perfect after one visit to the audiologist.  Do not 
expect the tinnitus to go away immediately, or stay away!  It all takes time.  
You must learn.  The brain responds to suggestions, so with my instruments in 
and operating, I am experiencing ringing simply because I am reading and 
writing on this thread.  I do know that it will go away once my mind is 
distracted to a different topic.  Before hearing aids, there was no relief.  
The ringing was with me most all the time, and it was driving me crazy!

Sorry, I probably pulled this a bit more off-topic, but I feel that it is 
important for us to fix our own hearing problem rather than expecting Elecraft 
to compensate for all of it.  I know that I had started to shut the world 
around me completely out because I couldn't hear things clearly.  I demonstrate 
that to myself when I forget to put my instruments in when I wake up in the 
mornings.

Mark
KE6BB

 

On Wednesday, March 27, 2019, 6:31:13 PM PDT, Gwen Patton 
 wrote:  
 
 I should probably see an audiologist someday. I've had nasty tinnitus as
long as I can remember. I spent most of my youth around loud musical
instruments, having begun playing brass instruments in 3rd grade. I've been
in many loud environments since, even though I don't recall it being a lot
of times until around 2001, when I got into shooting. But I always used
really good hearing protection.


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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Robert G Strickland via Elecraft

Dick...

I've used ReSound for about 10+ years. I'm on my third pair - the latest 
being brand new - and I've been very satisfied with their performance. 
The newest pair has blue tooth connectivity to just about everything as 
well as all the latest bells and whistles. There is an APP available 
that enables more control, almost to the extent that one gets at the 
audiologist.


My hearing is the typical, old age [79y/o], significant loss of higher 
frequencies and moderate loss across the lower audio spectrum. I do not 
have tinnitus. I operate almost exclusively CW, and if I'm going to be 
on the air for a while I take the hearing aids off. Natural frequency 
tailoring! SSB presents its own challenge to the hearing impaired; I'm 
sure you'll get good advice from others on the reflector that operate 
that mode.


...robert

On 3/28/2019 15:03, Dick Dickinson wrote:

Age 70.  I have a different hearing related problem as well as tinnitus.
Background noise on my rig above about 2.4kHz seems awfully hissy to me.
Above that point I have to start using the filters in my head to try and
shut the hissing out.  The mental filtering takes some effort and can lead
to fatigue.

I'm not sure how this came to be for me, but perhaps it is what became to
seem natural for me after listening to HF SSB through a pair of cascaded
2.4kHz filters (Icom IC-751A) for 16 years.  And even with that, I'd tend to
crank the passband tuning towards the lower end.

In my setup, I run my K3 through an LP-Pan, NaP3 software and onboard 192kHz
sound card.  In NaP3/K3 I rarely run the filters above 2.4kHz top / 0kHz at
the bottom.  As well, I use NaP3's equalizer dropping several dB above 4kHz.
The rest of the audio system is a 5.1 surround sound receiver with decent
bookshelf speakers + subwoofer.  I can tolerate wide band audio above 2.4kHz
as long as it is well above the noise level, but generally don't find the
audio above that range as particularly useful.


Costco - A good ham friend of mine, somewhat older than myself used to swear
by the Costco hearing aids.  He was a PhD EE and had a pretty good
appreciation for audio.  I'm not sure if Costco offers different brands, but
if there is a make that most agree on, can someone mention that here?


Dick - KA5KKT

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Robert G Strickland, PhD ABPH - KE2WY
rc...@verizon.net.usa
Syracuse, New York, USA
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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Randy Moore
Costco does have different brands, but I've gone with their in-house
Kirkland brand. These are rebranded versions of another manufacturer, and
that has changed from time to time. One can discover the actual maker with
Google, or just ask the Costco hearing aid people.

73,
Randy, KS4L

On Thu, Mar 28, 2019, 10:03 AM Dick Dickinson 
wrote:

> Age 70.  I have a different hearing related problem as well as tinnitus.
> Background noise on my rig above about 2.4kHz seems awfully hissy to me.
> Above that point I have to start using the filters in my head to try and
> shut the hissing out.  The mental filtering takes some effort and can lead
> to fatigue.
>
> I'm not sure how this came to be for me, but perhaps it is what became to
> seem natural for me after listening to HF SSB through a pair of cascaded
> 2.4kHz filters (Icom IC-751A) for 16 years.  And even with that, I'd tend
> to
> crank the passband tuning towards the lower end.
>
> In my setup, I run my K3 through an LP-Pan, NaP3 software and onboard
> 192kHz
> sound card.  In NaP3/K3 I rarely run the filters above 2.4kHz top / 0kHz at
> the bottom.  As well, I use NaP3's equalizer dropping several dB above
> 4kHz.
> The rest of the audio system is a 5.1 surround sound receiver with decent
> bookshelf speakers + subwoofer.  I can tolerate wide band audio above
> 2.4kHz
> as long as it is well above the noise level, but generally don't find the
> audio above that range as particularly useful.
>
>
> Costco - A good ham friend of mine, somewhat older than myself used to
> swear
> by the Costco hearing aids.  He was a PhD EE and had a pretty good
> appreciation for audio.  I'm not sure if Costco offers different brands,
> but
> if there is a make that most agree on, can someone mention that here?
>
>
> Dick - KA5KKT
>
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[Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Dick Dickinson
Age 70.  I have a different hearing related problem as well as tinnitus.
Background noise on my rig above about 2.4kHz seems awfully hissy to me.
Above that point I have to start using the filters in my head to try and
shut the hissing out.  The mental filtering takes some effort and can lead
to fatigue.

I'm not sure how this came to be for me, but perhaps it is what became to
seem natural for me after listening to HF SSB through a pair of cascaded
2.4kHz filters (Icom IC-751A) for 16 years.  And even with that, I'd tend to
crank the passband tuning towards the lower end.

In my setup, I run my K3 through an LP-Pan, NaP3 software and onboard 192kHz
sound card.  In NaP3/K3 I rarely run the filters above 2.4kHz top / 0kHz at
the bottom.  As well, I use NaP3's equalizer dropping several dB above 4kHz.
The rest of the audio system is a 5.1 surround sound receiver with decent
bookshelf speakers + subwoofer.  I can tolerate wide band audio above 2.4kHz
as long as it is well above the noise level, but generally don't find the
audio above that range as particularly useful.


Costco - A good ham friend of mine, somewhat older than myself used to swear
by the Costco hearing aids.  He was a PhD EE and had a pretty good
appreciation for audio.  I'm not sure if Costco offers different brands, but
if there is a make that most agree on, can someone mention that here?


Dick - KA5KKT

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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread KE8G
Yep, Costco for hearing aids is the best.  My wife has had them for years,
and we are going there today for "tune up".  Always great service, and with
our back and forth to Texas, we always have a Costco for follow up, if
needed.

73 de Jim - KE8G

On Thu, Mar 28, 2019 at 9:18 AM Randy Moore  wrote:

> Just want to echo the comments on hearing aids from Costco. I’ve had
> excellent service, excellent hearing aids, and very good pricing from our
> local Costco.
>
> 73,
> Randy, KS4L
>
> > On Mar 28, 2019, at 4:17 AM, Jim Brown 
> wrote:
> >
> >> On 3/28/2019 1:37 AM, David Wilcox via Elecraft wrote:
> >> Locally our Sams Club has decent prices and now Costco is in town too.
> >
> > I investigated this when my XYL wanted (and needed) aids. Costco has a
> great reputation for first class aids at half the cost of the same stuff
> from private audiologists. I went with her for her exams and fittings, and
> also had my own hearing checked. I'm a retired audio professional, Fellow
> of the Audio Engineering Society and emeritus member of the Acoustical
> Society of America, so I have strong background in these issues. I was VERY
> impressed with everything they did for her and for me, and a year later,
> she's still a very happy camper.
> >
> > At 77 years old, I've got significant high frequency hearing loss, but
> my needs are different from hers, and I haven't yet decided that I need
> aids. When I do, I'll go to Costco.
> >
> > In the short term, I've used this product from a first rate company in
> Chicago whose engineers were active in our AES section. They are a good
> solution for moderate, age-related loss of high frequency hearing, and at
> moderate cost. Their response is tailored for that, and there are two gain
> settings -- about 15 dB and about 25 dB. I use them on the lower setting
> when I'm going to be in an acoustic setting listening to a speaker that I'm
> interested in, and where the PA is not great. They are NOT a good solution
> for the tinnitus issues of original poster in this thread.
> >
> >
> https://www.etymotic.com/consumer/personal-sound-amplifiers/bean-qsa.html
> >
> > For those with modest hearing loss, RXEQ can be adjusted with lots of
> cut in the lower octave bands and boost in the higher octave bands. Whether
> this is enough will depend on our own hearing loss. My friend K6DGW, who
> has a lot of hearing loss, says it helps him.
> >
> > 73, Jim K9YC
> >
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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Randy Moore
Just want to echo the comments on hearing aids from Costco. I’ve had excellent 
service, excellent hearing aids, and very good pricing from our local Costco. 

73,
Randy, KS4L

> On Mar 28, 2019, at 4:17 AM, Jim Brown  wrote:
> 
>> On 3/28/2019 1:37 AM, David Wilcox via Elecraft wrote:
>> Locally our Sams Club has decent prices and now Costco is in town too.
> 
> I investigated this when my XYL wanted (and needed) aids. Costco has a great 
> reputation for first class aids at half the cost of the same stuff from 
> private audiologists. I went with her for her exams and fittings, and also 
> had my own hearing checked. I'm a retired audio professional, Fellow of the 
> Audio Engineering Society and emeritus member of the Acoustical Society of 
> America, so I have strong background in these issues. I was VERY impressed 
> with everything they did for her and for me, and a year later, she's still a 
> very happy camper.
> 
> At 77 years old, I've got significant high frequency hearing loss, but my 
> needs are different from hers, and I haven't yet decided that I need aids. 
> When I do, I'll go to Costco.
> 
> In the short term, I've used this product from a first rate company in 
> Chicago whose engineers were active in our AES section. They are a good 
> solution for moderate, age-related loss of high frequency hearing, and at 
> moderate cost. Their response is tailored for that, and there are two gain 
> settings -- about 15 dB and about 25 dB. I use them on the lower setting when 
> I'm going to be in an acoustic setting listening to a speaker that I'm 
> interested in, and where the PA is not great. They are NOT a good solution 
> for the tinnitus issues of original poster in this thread.
> 
> https://www.etymotic.com/consumer/personal-sound-amplifiers/bean-qsa.html
> 
> For those with modest hearing loss, RXEQ can be adjusted with lots of cut in 
> the lower octave bands and boost in the higher octave bands. Whether this is 
> enough will depend on our own hearing loss. My friend K6DGW, who has a lot of 
> hearing loss, says it helps him.
> 
> 73, Jim K9YC
> 
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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Barry
Ted,

If the RX EQ isn't enough, and you're interested in a relatively simple
homebrew project, I recall an article in 
QST by Hal, N4GG, about 15 years ago, for an outboard equalizer for use with
headphones.

Barry W2UP



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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread David Woolley
I would expect an audiologist to consider 3kHz as a high frequency, as 
they are generally interested in speech intelligibility, and hearing 
aids are not, generally, high bandwidth devices.


It's also high in musician's terms, being three and a bit octaves above 
middle C.


Someone with age related loss could easily be about 40dB down at that 
frequency.


On 27/03/2019 22:19, Walter Underwood wrote:

If so, ask them whether they consider 3 kHz to be high frequency.


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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread Jim Brown

On 3/28/2019 1:37 AM, David Wilcox via Elecraft wrote:

Locally our Sams Club has decent prices and now Costco is in town too.


I investigated this when my XYL wanted (and needed) aids. Costco has a 
great reputation for first class aids at half the cost of the same stuff 
from private audiologists. I went with her for her exams and fittings, 
and also had my own hearing checked. I'm a retired audio professional, 
Fellow of the Audio Engineering Society and emeritus member of the 
Acoustical Society of America, so I have strong background in these 
issues. I was VERY impressed with everything they did for her and for 
me, and a year later, she's still a very happy camper.


At 77 years old, I've got significant high frequency hearing loss, but 
my needs are different from hers, and I haven't yet decided that I need 
aids. When I do, I'll go to Costco.


In the short term, I've used this product from a first rate company in 
Chicago whose engineers were active in our AES section. They are a good 
solution for moderate, age-related loss of high frequency hearing, and 
at moderate cost. Their response is tailored for that, and there are two 
gain settings -- about 15 dB and about 25 dB. I use them on the lower 
setting when I'm going to be in an acoustic setting listening to a 
speaker that I'm interested in, and where the PA is not great. They are 
NOT a good solution for the tinnitus issues of original poster in this 
thread.


https://www.etymotic.com/consumer/personal-sound-amplifiers/bean-qsa.html

For those with modest hearing loss, RXEQ can be adjusted with lots of 
cut in the lower octave bands and boost in the higher octave bands. 
Whether this is enough will depend on our own hearing loss. My friend 
K6DGW, who has a lot of hearing loss, says it helps him.


73, Jim K9YC

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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-28 Thread David Wilcox via Elecraft
I second the motion about hearing aids and cost.  Get a couple of opinions from 
different vendors and don’t be afraid to ask your friends look closely and 
many of your friends may have hearing aids that you were not aware of.

My audiologist has been in the business since a kid as his father was the only 
local audiologist back in the day here in Traverse City.  He knows about us 
hams and listens to our needs.  His prices are also lower than some of the new 
pretty ladies who are popping up on every corner in this popular home for 
senior citizens and paying for TV advertising.

Locally our Sams Club has decent prices and now Costco is in town too.

A good pair of bluetooth hearing aids cost around $5000 but are worth it to me. 
 I can make adjustments on the fly and also listen to my iPhone without wearing 
ear buds.  I can also vary the ability to knock down noise in restaurants and 
on radio or enhance speech.  At music concerts I can adjust them for different 
auditoriums and even different kinds if music.  With a bluetooth transmitter or 
the TV ears hooked to my xcvr I can pipe the sound right to my hearing aids. It 
is great. The VA has hearing aid benefits but their service isn’t local. You 
have to drive down state to get them and for any adjustment.

I guess the thing I am trying to say is if you have a hearing loss you are 
losing out on life.  Get tested and at least try them.  There is no charge 
until you buy.  Also some audiologists take trade ins or have sets from clients 
who have passed away and will give them to you with a low cost to adjust them 
to your needs.  Don’t be afraid to ask.  Your family will thank you and life 
will be much better. I think hearing loss is one of the reasons older hams can 
get crotchety (my wife says I am both of those). Ha! 

From one who has been there, done that!

Dave K8WPE

David J. Wilcox K8WPE’s iPad

> On Mar 28, 2019, at 12:32 AM, Don Wilhelm  wrote:
> 
> Gwen and all,
> 
> If you find yourself in that situation, get yourself good hearing aids and 
> wear them all the time during your waking hours.  In most cases, that will 
> reduce the tinnitus drastically or eliminate it.
> Your brain will soon figure out that it does not have to invent sounds that 
> produce the tinnitus.  Yes, you will need the help of a good audiologist to 
> get the customized programming for your particular ears set right for you - 
> which frequency bands need amplification and by how much is not a trivial 
> undertaking.
> 
> The DSP programming in modern hearing aids is really amazing.  I don't know 
> how they get so much function in such a small device.
> 
> They are expensive, but well worth it.
> 
> 73,
> Don W3FPR
> 
>> On 3/27/2019 9:28 PM, Gwen Patton wrote:
>> I should probably see an audiologist someday. I've had nasty tinnitus as
>> long as I can remember. I spent most of my youth around loud musical
>> instruments, having begun playing brass instruments in 3rd grade. I've been
>> in many loud environments since, even though I don't recall it being a lot
>> of times until around 2001, when I got into shooting. But I always used
>> really good hearing protection.
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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-27 Thread Don Wilhelm

Gwen and all,

If you find yourself in that situation, get yourself good hearing aids 
and wear them all the time during your waking hours.  In most cases, 
that will reduce the tinnitus drastically or eliminate it.
Your brain will soon figure out that it does not have to invent sounds 
that produce the tinnitus.  Yes, you will need the help of a good 
audiologist to get the customized programming for your particular ears 
set right for you - which frequency bands need amplification and by how 
much is not a trivial undertaking.


The DSP programming in modern hearing aids is really amazing.  I don't 
know how they get so much function in such a small device.


They are expensive, but well worth it.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 3/27/2019 9:28 PM, Gwen Patton wrote:

I should probably see an audiologist someday. I've had nasty tinnitus as
long as I can remember. I spent most of my youth around loud musical
instruments, having begun playing brass instruments in 3rd grade. I've been
in many loud environments since, even though I don't recall it being a lot
of times until around 2001, when I got into shooting. But I always used
really good hearing protection.

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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-27 Thread Jim Brown

On 3/27/2019 6:28 PM, Gwen Patton wrote:

Maybe an audiologist can help me with it, and I'm glad
someone popped up with the idea, because it had never occurred to me that
there WERE audiologists (of course there are, why wouldn't there be?) until
I read this post.


Yes, you should. But watch your wallet when he/she tries to sell you the 
hearing aids that pay her/him a BIG commission.


73, Jim K9YC

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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-27 Thread Gwen Patton
I should probably see an audiologist someday. I've had nasty tinnitus as
long as I can remember. I spent most of my youth around loud musical
instruments, having begun playing brass instruments in 3rd grade. I've been
in many loud environments since, even though I don't recall it being a lot
of times until around 2001, when I got into shooting. But I always used
really good hearing protection.

I'm finding pulling weak signals out of radio noise difficult. The biggest
problem is that my tinnitus pulses. It'll get louder, change frequency,
then get quieter, and seems to shift from ear to ear, almost as if I'm
hearing a real sound that's changing phase. That plays hob with CW signals,
let me tell you! If I listen to S9 white noise, no matter whether there's a
signal there or not, I can always hear something that could be a very faint
CW signal. It isn't there, but my brain THINKS it is, and tries to decode
it and can't. It's very frustrating, to have a sort of bandit signal in
one's own ears. Maybe an audiologist can help me with it, and I'm glad
someone popped up with the idea, because it had never occurred to me that
there WERE audiologists (of course there are, why wouldn't there be?) until
I read this post.

Sorry if there isn't enough topic in it, but part of ham radio is being
able to perceive the signals, after all. If I'm going to be losing my
hearing, I want to start learning to use visual cues for CW signals early
on, so I don't lose the ability entirely!

Gwen, NG3P

On Wed, Mar 27, 2019 at 7:02 PM Ken Widelitz  wrote:

> Hi Ted,
>
> I lost about 60% of the hearing in my left ear about 6 years ago as a
> result of a virus that I didn't know I had until I thought I had water in
> my ear for over a week went to the doctor. The loss sharply increases after
> 550 - 600 hz, so it doesn't affect CW as much as phone. I also have a high
> frequency tinnitus, around 12 -14 khz. Honestly, I believe years of hamming
> have helped me filter out and deal with the tinnitus. A hearing aid also
> helps with the tinnitus, but for me does not help intelligibility at all.
>
> For me the issue with the K3 was I couldn't get enough volume to my left
> ear despite tweaking the RX EQ.
>
> I bought the new Heil PRAS as soon as it was available. I built a little
> breakout box to put it on the left ear only and I totally forget I have a
> hearing loss during contests. The PRAS can be optimized for your CW sweet
> spot or for SSB. It works very well. I turn up the volume until a mono
> signal is centered in my head overcoming the hearing deficit. I don't know
> how much credit the PRAS gets but the first time I used it for SS Phone was
> in 2018 and I came in 2nd SOU. I've never made the top 10 in SS Phone in
> any category ever before.
>
> Prior to the PRAS I used a FIIO headphone amp. They are much less
> expensive ($125 vs. $500.) They also worked for me, but IMHO the PRAS is
> better as it is designed for ham audio. The negatives are the price (I've
> asked Bob Heil to sell it without the powered speaker, but as of yet they
> don't) and the fact that it is a mono device (which isn't so much of a
> negative for me since my right ear still works fine.) To answer another of
> your questions, with the headphone amp I use the other K3 settings as I
> always have. Before I used a headphone amp, I never perceived an
> improvement in hearing from tweaking filters, RX EQ or other parameters.
>
> Does the increased volume further damage my hearing? I don't know. I don't
> care. I am functionally deaf in the left ear already. I do not perceive an
> increase in tinnitus or a further loss of hearing after a 48 hour contest
> as the result of using a headphone amp. Nor do I perceive an increase in
> hearing Morse coming from the fridge, faucet or AC after a CW contest,
> which I have always heard.
>
> 73, Ken, K6LA / VY2TT
>
> -Original Message-
> From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net [mailto:
> elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Walter Underwood
> Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2019 3:20 PM
> To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
> Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables
>
> I m not quite clear about the audiologist s recommendations. Did they tell
> you to avoid loud, high frequency sound?
>
> If so, ask them whether they consider 3 kHz to be high frequency. That is
> the highest frequency you should hear from an amateur SSB signal. Unless
> they and you are in ESSB mode, which would make it 4 kHz.
>
> I expect that they don t consider 3 kHz to be high frequency. If that is
> true, you can do what ever you want with RX EQ.
>
> wunder
> K6WRU
> Walter Underwood
> CM87wj
> http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)
>
> > On Mar 27, 2019, at 3:12 PM, Dauer, Edward  wrote:
> >
> > A que

Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-27 Thread Ken Widelitz
Hi Ted,

I lost about 60% of the hearing in my left ear about 6 years ago as a result of 
a virus that I didn't know I had until I thought I had water in my ear for over 
a week went to the doctor. The loss sharply increases after 550 - 600 hz, so it 
doesn't affect CW as much as phone. I also have a high frequency tinnitus, 
around 12 -14 khz. Honestly, I believe years of hamming have helped me filter 
out and deal with the tinnitus. A hearing aid also helps with the tinnitus, but 
for me does not help intelligibility at all. 

For me the issue with the K3 was I couldn't get enough volume to my left ear 
despite tweaking the RX EQ. 

I bought the new Heil PRAS as soon as it was available. I built a little 
breakout box to put it on the left ear only and I totally forget I have a 
hearing loss during contests. The PRAS can be optimized for your CW sweet spot 
or for SSB. It works very well. I turn up the volume until a mono signal is 
centered in my head overcoming the hearing deficit. I don't know how much 
credit the PRAS gets but the first time I used it for SS Phone was in 2018 and 
I came in 2nd SOU. I've never made the top 10 in SS Phone in any category ever 
before.

Prior to the PRAS I used a FIIO headphone amp. They are much less expensive 
($125 vs. $500.) They also worked for me, but IMHO the PRAS is better as it is 
designed for ham audio. The negatives are the price (I've asked Bob Heil to 
sell it without the powered speaker, but as of yet they don't) and the fact 
that it is a mono device (which isn't so much of a negative for me since my 
right ear still works fine.) To answer another of your questions, with the 
headphone amp I use the other K3 settings as I always have. Before I used a 
headphone amp, I never perceived an improvement in hearing from tweaking 
filters, RX EQ or other parameters. 

Does the increased volume further damage my hearing? I don't know. I don't 
care. I am functionally deaf in the left ear already. I do not perceive an 
increase in tinnitus or a further loss of hearing after a 48 hour contest as 
the result of using a headphone amp. Nor do I perceive an increase in hearing 
Morse coming from the fridge, faucet or AC after a CW contest, which I have 
always heard.

73, Ken, K6LA / VY2TT

-Original Message-
From: elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net 
[mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of Walter Underwood
Sent: Wednesday, March 27, 2019 3:20 PM
To: elecraft@mailman.qth.net
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

I m not quite clear about the audiologist s recommendations. Did they tell you 
to avoid loud, high frequency sound?

If so, ask them whether they consider 3 kHz to be high frequency. That is the 
highest frequency you should hear from an amateur SSB signal. Unless they and 
you are in ESSB mode, which would make it 4 kHz.

I expect that they don t consider 3 kHz to be high frequency. If that is true, 
you can do what ever you want with RX EQ.

wunder
K6WRU
Walter Underwood
CM87wj
http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)

> On Mar 27, 2019, at 3:12 PM, Dauer, Edward  wrote:
> 
> A question about special settings for the K3 s RX EQ, AFX, filter width and 
> passband settings and other on-board parameters for a particular problem . . .
> 
> Just had a long visit with an audiologist, about a worsening tinnitus 
> condition.  Principal underlying cause is loss of acuity at the high end of 
> the audio scale.  I will not mention or ask about any of the contributing 
> neurology, physiology, psychology or any other medical ology lest this post 
> be branded with the Scarlet Letters OT.   Other than to say, that to avoid 
> making the situation worse I am told I should avoid exposing myself to audio 
> environments that would make the underlying acuity loss worse.
> 
> Has anyone who has faced this learned anything by experience or otherwise 
> about the filter, EQ, and other settings for the K3 in both SSB and CW modes 
> that would be best for this sort of thing?
> 
> Please, speak up.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Ted, KN1CBR
> 
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Re: [Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-27 Thread Walter Underwood
I’m not quite clear about the audiologist’s recommendations. Did they tell you 
to avoid loud, high frequency sound?

If so, ask them whether they consider 3 kHz to be high frequency. That is the 
highest frequency you should hear from an amateur SSB signal. Unless they and 
you are in ESSB mode, which would make it 4 kHz.

I expect that they don’t consider 3 kHz to be high frequency. If that is true, 
you can do what ever you want with RX EQ.

wunder
K6WRU
Walter Underwood
CM87wj
http://observer.wunderwood.org/ (my blog)

> On Mar 27, 2019, at 3:12 PM, Dauer, Edward  wrote:
> 
> A question about special settings for the K3’s RX EQ, AFX, filter width and 
> passband settings and other on-board parameters for a particular problem . . .
> 
> Just had a long visit with an audiologist, about a worsening tinnitus 
> condition.  Principal underlying cause is loss of acuity at the high end of 
> the audio scale.  I will not mention or ask about any of the contributing 
> neurology, physiology, psychology or any other medical ology lest this post 
> be branded with the Scarlet Letters OT.   Other than to say, that to avoid 
> making the situation worse I am told I should avoid exposing myself to audio 
> environments that would make the underlying acuity loss worse.
> 
> Has anyone who has faced this learned anything by experience or otherwise 
> about the filter, EQ, and other settings for the K3 in both SSB and CW modes 
> that would be best for this sort of thing?
> 
> Please, speak up.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Ted, KN1CBR
> 
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[Elecraft] Tinnitus and the K3 RX EQ and Related Variables

2019-03-27 Thread Dauer, Edward
A question about special settings for the K3’s RX EQ, AFX, filter width and 
passband settings and other on-board parameters for a particular problem . . .

Just had a long visit with an audiologist, about a worsening tinnitus 
condition.  Principal underlying cause is loss of acuity at the high end of the 
audio scale.  I will not mention or ask about any of the contributing 
neurology, physiology, psychology or any other medical ology lest this post be 
branded with the Scarlet Letters OT.   Other than to say, that to avoid making 
the situation worse I am told I should avoid exposing myself to audio 
environments that would make the underlying acuity loss worse.

Has anyone who has faced this learned anything by experience or otherwise about 
the filter, EQ, and other settings for the K3 in both SSB and CW modes that 
would be best for this sort of thing?

Please, speak up.

Thanks,

Ted, KN1CBR

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