I have read here about head phones and was wondering what is the best type and to buy for our problem. I have heard the open air one work the best and cause the least amount of problems. Any answers greatly appreciated. Jon
I use the Bose QC 3, I strongly recommend those or the QC 15. They are noise canceling headphones so they also block out a lot of external noises a consequence of which you also don't need to turn up the volume. They are also great for traveling with trains, airplanes or cars ( if you are not the driver of course ). They are expensive but I would always buy them again, so check them out and see if you like them...
I wouldn't recommend noise-cancelling headphones, because they may cause nausea for some people. I do have the new Bose in-ear noise cancelling headphones still. Just get quality headphones which you like. Try them before buying. If you want advice what to buy, you can ask me. I know quite a bit about them.
P.S. I agree that caution is needed with headphones. My T also started most likely because of them and too high volumes.
I think? That my head phones exsaterbate my tennitus? My wife doesn't like the TV noise on and so I watch it with my head phones on and I notice that the next day my t's seem to spike is there a reason for this? I also have a special set of hearing aids that can pick up the TV signal but notice also with these I get a spike in my t noises. Can this be caused by to my sound input directly in the ears canal?
Anyone else use noise canceling headphones for stuff like walking in the city etc? How much noise do these cancel? Are they ok to use as noise protection for every day noises say around 80db? Do they actually protect you or is the active noise canceling used not safe?
I am tired of ear plugs that lock in the T sound, I need something different. I'm also sick of sticking stuff into my ears. What is my best option?
@Telis , i'm using Bose headphones, with noise canceling( only using them at home) and it reduces mostly little background noise, it works well but i think it's nothing comparable to earplugs.
There is on internet noise protecting headsets ( the same type of products as peltor) which don't look like huge working protection, maybe you should consider it.