S
skinnyfat
Guest
Morning all
My step father has nerve deafness which affects his hearing in the upper spectrum of the audible freq. range. Due to this he struggles to listen to TV properly and is currently using headphones and a cordless transmitter. This does not fully solve the problem as the treble freq. are still difficult for him to hear. Bass and mid not so much of a problem and he has had MANY altercations with sales reps who try to sell him cans with "bass boost" plastered all over them. Trust me he does not mince his words and demands results. the cans he is using - I cant recall but nothing high grade as he says he has tried Sennheiser and the like and made no difference. I feel he is going about it the wronf way and needs some sort of EQ (graphic or parametric) and an amp. Do any of you know the best way to solve this without having to strap a hifi on his back?
Thanks in advance
Skinny
My step father has nerve deafness which affects his hearing in the upper spectrum of the audible freq. range. Due to this he struggles to listen to TV properly and is currently using headphones and a cordless transmitter. This does not fully solve the problem as the treble freq. are still difficult for him to hear. Bass and mid not so much of a problem and he has had MANY altercations with sales reps who try to sell him cans with "bass boost" plastered all over them. Trust me he does not mince his words and demands results. the cans he is using - I cant recall but nothing high grade as he says he has tried Sennheiser and the like and made no difference. I feel he is going about it the wronf way and needs some sort of EQ (graphic or parametric) and an amp. Do any of you know the best way to solve this without having to strap a hifi on his back?
Thanks in advance
Skinny